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Teen alleging rape turns to YouTube

The video is hard to turn away from. A sobbing 16-year-old sits in her bedroom and, staring into a camera, says she has been raped.

Tiny helicopter to fly over da Vinci's birthplace

A Japanese man who developed the world's smallest helicopter will take flight in the birthplace of Leonardo da Vinci in tribute to the Renaissance genius' original idea.

Colonel: Build military 'botnet' as cyberspace weapon

Hackers often harness the combined power of thousands of virus-infected personal computers to pump out spam e-mail or disable targeted servers by overwhelming them with Internet traffic.

Can the USB go from computer dork to Hollywood player?

Foreseeing the future is a tricky business. Why, for instance, should Hollywood moguls have paid much attention when the USB standard emerged in the mid-90's?

Honda robot conducts Detroit symphony

The lights dimmed, the sold-out hall grew hushed and out walked the conductor -- shiny, white and 4 feet, 3 inches tall.

Landlines go dead as more users rely on cell phones

For nearly three in 10 households, don't even bother trying to call them on a landline phone. They either only have a cell phone or seldom if ever take calls on their traditional phone.

MySpace wins $230 million in Internet spam case

The popular online hangout MySpace has won a $230 million judgment over junk messages sent to its members in what is believed to be the largest anti-spam award ever.

Eco-fashion: Transforming trash into treasures

Fashion designers are giving new life to worthless candy wrappers, newspapers and plastic bags; turning trash into trendy tote bags, purses and jewelry.

Hacker steals data of 6 million Chileans

A hacker who identified himself as "Anonymous Coward" stole personal data of 6 million Chileans -- reportedly including a daughter of the president -- and posted it briefly on the Internet, authorities said Sunday.

Colliding with nature's best-kept secrets

Visiting a particle accelerator is like a religious experience, at least for Nima Arkani-Hamed.

Teen alleging rape turns to YouTube

The video is hard to turn away from. A sobbing 16-year-old sits in her bedroom and, staring into a camera, says she has been raped.

Tiny helicopter to fly over da Vinci's birthplace

A Japanese man who developed the world's smallest helicopter will take flight in the birthplace of Leonardo da Vinci in tribute to the Renaissance genius' original idea.

Colonel: Build military 'botnet' as cyberspace weapon

Hackers often harness the combined power of thousands of virus-infected personal computers to pump out spam e-mail or disable targeted servers by overwhelming them with Internet traffic.

Can the USB go from computer dork to Hollywood player?

Foreseeing the future is a tricky business. Why, for instance, should Hollywood moguls have paid much attention when the USB standard emerged in the mid-90's?

Honda robot conducts Detroit symphony

The lights dimmed, the sold-out hall grew hushed and out walked the conductor -- shiny, white and 4 feet, 3 inches tall.

Landlines go dead as more users rely on cell phones

For nearly three in 10 households, don't even bother trying to call them on a landline phone. They either only have a cell phone or seldom if ever take calls on their traditional phone.

MySpace wins $230 million in Internet spam case

The popular online hangout MySpace has won a $230 million judgment over junk messages sent to its members in what is believed to be the largest anti-spam award ever.

Eco-fashion: Transforming trash into treasures

Fashion designers are giving new life to worthless candy wrappers, newspapers and plastic bags; turning trash into trendy tote bags, purses and jewelry.

Hacker steals data of 6 million Chileans

A hacker who identified himself as "Anonymous Coward" stole personal data of 6 million Chileans -- reportedly including a daughter of the president -- and posted it briefly on the Internet, authorities said Sunday.

Colliding with nature's best-kept secrets

Visiting a particle accelerator is like a religious experience, at least for Nima Arkani-Hamed.

Fighting the agents of organized cybercrime

Back in the good old days of the Internet, the hacker was a teenager motivated by high-tech pranks and bragging rights. Today, the online thief could be anyone with 'Net access after a quick buck.

Myanmar cyclone: Perfect storm of conditions

A cyclone with winds up to 120 mph (190 kph). A low-lying, densely populated delta region, stripped of its protective trees.

Facebook safeguards will protect young users

Facebook, the world's second-largest social networking Web site, will add more than 40 safeguards to protect young users from sexual predators and cyberbullies, attorneys general from several states said Thursday.

Grand Theft Auto IV steals sales records

It's official. Grand Theft Auto IV is a video game blockbuster, with gamers around the world buying up more than 6 million copies of the gritty, urban action title in its first week of sales.

Device lets ships hear whale chatter, avoid strikes

A spotter bangs three times on the boat's cabin roof, signaling the captain to cut the throttle -- now.

Review: This 'Iron Man' soars in game

"Iron Man" has always had a flight problem in video games.

More commercial bee colonies lost

A survey of bee health released Tuesday revealed a grim picture, with 36.1 percent of the nation's commercially managed hives lost since last year.

Colbert wins 'Webby Person of the Year'

Stephen Colbert may have already earned the title of "Greatest Living American" but now he can add "Webby Person of the Year."

Tropics face warming threat, scientists say

Although global warming is expected to be strongest at the poles, it may be an even greater threat to species living in the tropics, scientists say.

Long-awaited electric sports car rolls out

It's safe to say Jeremy Snyder gets a charge out of the two-seat Tesla Roadster whenever he pulls one off the lot, and not because it's equipped with an all-electric engine.

In wake of twister, Kansas town is rebuilding green

There are still piles of bricks and rubble on countless streets in Greensburg, Kansas, a year after a tornado demolished more than 90 percent of the town.

Town destroyed by tornado rebuilds by going green

A year after it was practically wiped off the map by a tornado, Greensburg is rising again -- and going green, too, with solar panels, wind turbines, tinted windows, water-saving toilets and other energy-efficient technology.

The new fame: Internet celebrity

The Internet is setting a new standard for celebrity. Fame is no longer about getting "15 minutes"; it's about becoming famous to 15 people.

Critics: Swimsuit 'technological doping'

The Speedo LZR Racer swimsuit is making such a splash in the pool that U.S. head coach Mark Schubert believes every record in the sport could fall at the Beijing Olympics.

'GTA IV' could keep 'Iron Man' audience at home

Who would win in a fight: a police-killing, rampage-driven thug or a superhero encased in a technologically superior suit of armor?

The Internet, in real life

There's a certain detachment involved when you're surfing the Web, sitting alone at the computer, facing an inanimate screen. But there are real people to be found on the other end of the "intertubes."

Cell phones making sense, as sensors

When you go shopping in a mall, you create an invisible path as you head from one store to another. For the manager of a mall, it would be useful to see the paths made by you and hundreds of other shoppers over time. Now, there's a tool for detecting those paths: the cell phone.

Grand Theft Auto 4 set to blast sales records

The fourth installment of the controversial video game "Grand Theft Auto" goes on sale worldwide Tuesday with expectations that it will break sales records.

Social networking applications pose risks

Sarah Brown is unusually cautious when it comes to social networking.

'Boys with toys' expo hawks security goods

Though it looks like a space-aged android playing the harmonica, it's actually a device designed to protect you in a biological or chemical attack.

New Zealand's biggest glacier 'shrinking'

New Zealand's biggest glacier is melting at its fastest pace in recent history, a scientist said Thursday. The Tasman Glacier on South Island was 18 miles long in 1990, with virtually no lake at its front edge, Massey University glacier expert Martin Brook said.

Student 'Twitters' his way out of Egyptian jail

James Karl Buck helped free himself from an Egyptian jail with a one-word blog post from his cell phone.

Sony cancels out the headphone competition

Sony is certainly no stranger to the headphone market. The company's portable line may very well be the most popular aftermarket earphones. It has quite an array of full-size "cans" as well as a decent selection of noise-canceling models.

'Monotonous' page turning helps digitize books for Google

In a dimly lit back room on the second level of the University of Michigan library's book-shelving department, Courtney Mitchel helped a giant desktop machine digest a rare, centuries-old Bible.

The revolution will be mobilized

First it was instant messaging during office hours that gave us the thrill of passing notes in class. Then it was ogling ourselves on Web cams, ranting our minds on blogs, uploading our baby photos on Flickr and poking each other on Facebook. These days, as corporate records show, we choose to spend our lunch breaks watching YouTube, if not chatting over Skype.

Humans nearly wiped out 70,000 years ago, study says

Human beings may have had a brush with extinction 70,000 years ago, an extensive genetic study suggests.

BTW, teen writing may cause teachers to :(

It's nothing to LOL about: Despite the best efforts to keep school writing assignments formal, two-thirds of teens admit in a survey that emoticons and other informal styles have crept in.

Water desalination becoming more realistic

There's probably a place for desalted seawater in meeting the nation's future water needs, but research is needed to reduce the costs and impact on the environment, the National Research Council says.

China, U.S. tied for most Web users

China's fast-growing population of Internet users has soared to 221 million, tying the United States for the largest number of people online, according to government data reported Thursday.

Endangered zebra life caught on GPS

If you were a zebra, how would you spend your days?

How to survive the switch to digital TV

Did my TV screen just shrink?

Greenhouse gases gathering at faster pace

Major greenhouse gases in the air are accumulating faster than in the past despite efforts to curtail their growth.

Conflict follows device that drives away teen loiterers

A wall-mounted gadget designed to drive away loiterers with a shrill, piercing noise audible only to teens and young adults is infuriating civil liberties groups and tormenting young people after being introduced into the United States.

EPA scientists cite political interference

Hundreds of Environmental Protection Agency scientists complain they have been victims of political interference and pressure from superiors to skew their findings, according to a survey released Wednesday by an advocacy group.

Publisher to print German Wikipedia volume

In a move combining user-created online encyclopedias with the printed page, Germany's Bertelsmann AG will publish what could be the first in a series of yearbooks with content derived from entries on Wikipedia.

Microsoft subsidiary speaks: Voice search for BlackBerry

Microsoft Corp.'s Tellme subsidiary has launched an application for the BlackBerry that lets people speak commands into their smart phones to search for businesses and make other queries.

Writers push for laws to maintain Internet freedom

During the recent writers strike that virtually paralyzed television production for three months, Patric Verrone learned the true value of the Internet.

Sony delays virtual world release a second time

Sony is delaying the start of its "Home" virtual world for its PlayStation 3 video game machine until the latter half of this year -- the second time the Japanese electronics and entertainment company has postponed the online interactive service.

HD owners: Increased signal compression hurts picture

In Brent Swanson's basement home theater, there should be nothing drab about "Battlestar Galactica." He's got a high-end projector that beams the picture onto a wall painted like a silver screen, and speakers loom in the corners, flanking two big subwoofers.

More people buying hybrid cars

Kim Fenske drives a bus in Colorado by day, but when he's not working, he zooms around the mountains in a 2007 Toyota Prius.

Telepresence: Seeing is believing

Business travel sucks. It sucks energy, it sucks time, and mostly it just sucks. We're stuck with it because nothing beats a physical presence.

CNN Web site targeted

CNN was targeted Thursday by attempts to interrupt its news Web site, resulting in countermeasures that caused the service to be slow or unavailable to some users in limited areas of Asia.

Facebook users translating site for free

The three-year-old social networking phenomenon Facebook, worth more than $15 billion by many estimates, got a good deal on going global.

Funny or Die, you're so big now!

FunnyOrDie.com, the Web site started by Will Ferrell and Adam McKay, is 1 year old. Its biggest star, Pearl, is 3.

Global sensation 'Sims' hits 100 million milestone

There are no scary monsters to slay, no enemies to shoot and no cars to hijack. But "The Sims" video and computer game has sold 100 million units since its launch in 2000.

Edward Lorenz, father of chaos theory, dies at age 90

Edward Lorenz, the father of chaos theory, died at his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Wednesday. He was 90.

Researchers eye farm waste as energy

Washington University engineers using imaging technology have found that vigorous mixing helps microorganisms turn farm waste into alternative energy.

MySpace, Facebook: Big not always better

Forget Facebook, MySpace or any other online hangout that boasts tens or hundreds of millions of people.

Dutch to go online to register life's milestones

Some of life's greatest moments will soon be taken care of online in the Netherlands -- or at least some of the paperwork may be.

Wife takes divorce drama online, vents scorn via YouTube

We're the YouTube Generation, living in the YouTube Era, in a YouTube World. And now we apparently have a YouTube Divorce.

Love-struck hacker proposes using 'Bejeweled'

Hiding a ring in a bouquet just wasn't enough when a computer programmer decided to pop the question.

MySpace launches Korean-language site

The co-founder of MySpace said he believes the popular online hangout is poised to succeed in South Korea after closely scrutinizing U.S. Internet services that have faced challenges making inroads here.

Users petition to keep Windows XP

Microsoft Corp.'s operating systems run most personal computers around the globe and are a cash cow for the world's largest software maker. But you'd never confuse a Windows user with the passionate fans of Mac OS X or even the free Linux operating system.

Malaysian candidates required to have blogs

Some candidates for posts in Malaysia's ruling party will be required to set up blogs, an official said Friday, a turnaround for governing politicians who had derided online politicking.

Lake in Chile empties from melting glacier

Melting ice in southern Chile caused a glacial lake to swell and then empty suddenly, sending a "tsunami" rolling through a river, a scientist said Thursday. No one was injured in the remote region.

FCC approves emergency alert text-messaging system

Cell phone users will get text message alerts of emergencies under a new nationwide alert system approved late Wednesday by the Federal Communications Commission, according to FCC spokesman Robert Kenny.

New technology for cameras, robots, medicine measures smiles

The breadth of a smile can be measured by new technology from Japanese electronics and health care company Omron Corp.

High-tech LZR Racer swimsuit making waves

FINA president Mustapha Larfaoui defended swimmers Wednesday who have broken world records in Speedo's new high-tech LZR Racer suit.

Car rentals go "green"

The car rental business is slowly undergoing a green evolution, packing its fleets with more hybrids and fuel efficient vehicles.

Chertoff wants early warning system for infrastructure attacks

Federal cybersecurity officials are trying to develop an early warning system that alerts authorities to incoming computer attacks targeting critical U.S. infrastructure, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said.

Google Earth maps refugee crises

Internet search giant Google Inc. unveiled a new feature Tuesday for its popular mapping programs that shines a spotlight on the movement of refugees around the world.

MySpace expands site targeting U.S. Latinos

The online hangout MySpace is expanding its offerings for U.S. Hispanics, adding eight bilingual communities focused on Latino bands and celebrities, soccer and other interests.

Facebook unveils instant message feature

Facebook fans are getting a new toy this week. With the launch of Facebook Chat, users will be able to communicate in real time with friends on the site.

Report: Taxpayer records not secure

The Internal Revenue Service has left sensitive taxpayer information vulnerable to disgruntled IRS employees, contractors or hackers, according to independent auditors.

Navajo Nation likely to lose Internet service

The thousands of Navajo Nation residents who rely on the Internet to work, study and communicate across their 27,000-square-mile reservation will be out of luck Monday, if their service provider shuts access as planned.

Ditch your PC and live the shared life

Do you think you will be using a personal computer for the rest of your life?

Back to pencil and paper for 2010 census

Technology problems will force the government to count all of the nation's 300 million residents the old-fashioned way in the 2010 census -- with paper and pencil.

Napster's revenue exceeds analysts' expectations

Online music retailer Napster Inc. said Thursday it expects revenue for its fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 totaled about $31 million, beating analysts' expectations.

Paramount goes 'There' with film clips

Paramount Pictures' film vault is opening up in the virtual world.

Economy in the dumps? Not for GameStop

The uncertainty that confronts consumers and investors in the U.S. is staggering. There's the price of gasoline, which creeps higher almost daily; a housing market that month after month gets gloomier and gloomier; and the conflict in Iraq that has cost the U.S. an estimated $3 trillion.

Vets pay tribute to fallen comrades at virtual Vietnam wall

Julius Derico Jr. didn't need to travel to the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington to pay tribute to his fallen comrade -- the first casualty of his unit in Vietnam.

New Zealand convicts 'AKILL' of hacking

A New Zealand teenager allegedly involved in an international cyber crime network has been convicted of illegal computer hacking after pleading guilty to six charges.

European Union, NATO to tackle cybercrime

Cybercrime experts from around the world will meet in Europe this week to discuss how governments should counter attacks aimed at crippling the Internet and hitting users with data loss, identity theft and fraud.

Ordinary Cubans gain access to cell service

President Raul Castro's government said Friday it is allowing cell phones for ordinary Cubans, a luxury previously reserved for those who worked for foreign firms or held key posts with the communist-run state.

Japan aims to launch paper plane in space

Japanese scientists and origami masters hope to launch a paper airplane from space and learn from its trip back to Earth.

YouTube feature gives 'Insight' on viewer stats

The popular video-sharing site YouTube is giving contributors more details about who's watching their video clips and when, offering advertisers additional insights they can use to target their pitches.

Comcast agrees not to interfere with file-sharing

Comcast Corp., an Internet service provider under investigation for hampering online file-sharing by its subscribers, announced Thursday an about-face in its stance and said it will treat all types of Internet traffic equally.

Massive ice shelf on verge of breakup

Some 220 square miles (570 square kilometers) of ice has collapsed in Antarctica and an ice shelf about the size of Connecticut is "hanging by a thread," the British Antarctic Survey has said, blaming global warming.

Fancy computers spell trouble for 2010 census

Big worries for the nation's first high-tech census should have been obvious when tests showed some of the door-to-door headcounters couldn't figure out their fancy new handheld computers.

Security lapse exposes Facebook photos

A security lapse made it possible for unwelcome strangers to peruse personal photos posted on Facebook Inc.'s popular online hangout, circumventing a recent upgrade to the Web site's privacy controls.

Endeavour heads home after fond farewells

Shuttle Endeavour pulled away from the international space station Monday and headed for home after a heartfelt farewell between the two crews.

Traditional media form online ad networks

Traditional media companies trying to stem the flow of advertising dollars to Google and other large Internet companies are increasingly building ad networks of their own, anchored by their brands.

Sony's new design may be sharp, but photos aren't

With its T series, Sony has an unfortunate habit of taking at least one step back for every two steps forward.

Verizon, AT&T win wireless airwave auction

The nation's cell phone companies won big in a record-setting government airways auction, the Federal Communications Commission announced Thursday.

Building a bionic body

Facebook 'cheater' won't be expelled from college

A Canadian university ruled Tuesday against expelling a first-year engineering student accused of cheating through an online study group on Facebook.

More virtual links will bring healthcare to rural areas

In rural areas, where accessing health care is often a challenge, the doctors and patients of the future will increasingly be linked by virtual interstates.

U.N.: Glaciers shrinking at record rate

Glaciers are shrinking at record rates and many could disappear within decades, the U.N. Environment Program said Sunday.

Pre-Inca temple uncovered in Peru

Archaeologists have discovered the ruins of an ancient temple, roadway and irrigation systems at a famed fortress overlooking the Inca capital of Cuzco, according to officials involved with the dig.

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