|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MySpace tool to help block sex offenders
Dec 5 2006 5:24PM (CT)
NEW YORK (AP) - The popular online hangout MySpace said Tuesday it will develop technologies to help block convicted sex offenders, the site's latest attempt to address complaints about sexual predators and other dangers to teens.
|
|
|
Iran blocks access to YouTube.com
Dec 5 2006 4:54PM (CT)
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran has blocked access to the popular video-sharing Web site YouTube.com, and a media rights group warned Tuesday that Internet censorship in the Islamic state is on the rise.
|
|
|
Hackers attack Naval War College network
Dec 5 2006 3:53PM (CT)
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - Hackers attacked the computer network at the Naval War College in Newport, taking down the school's network for more than two weeks, including some e-mail services and the college's Web site.
|
|
|
$150 laptops to get rival in Brazil
Dec 5 2006 2:55PM (CT)
SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) - Intel Corp. said Tuesday its diminutive low-cost laptop will be evaluated in Brazil next year alongside a cheaper alternative from a nonprofit group seeking to bring computers to poor children worldwide.
|
|
|
Iran blocks access to YouTube.com
Dec 5 2006 2:54PM (CT)
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran has blocked access to the popular video-sharing Web site YouTube.com, and a press rights group warned on Tuesday that Internet censorship in the Islamic state is on the rise.
|
|
|
World chess champion loses to computer
Dec 5 2006 2:09PM (CT)
BONN, Germany (AP) - World chess champion Vladimir Kramnik lost his final game in a match against computer program Deep Fritz on Tuesday, ceding a hard-fought Man vs. Machine series 4-2.
|
|
|
Japan group seeks YouTube copyright system
Dec 5 2006 2:02AM (CT)
TOKYO (AP) - A Japanese entertainment group has asked the popular video-sharing site YouTube Inc. to implement a system to prevent users from uploading videos that would infringe copyrights, a group spokesman said Tuesday.
|
|
|
New chip provides high-end sound
Dec 5 2006 12:21AM (CT)
NEW YORK (AP) - Veteran audio engineer Tony Bongiovi, who once worked with Jimi Hendrix, has been disappointed for decades that the equipment most people used to listen to music couldn't replicate the high-quality sound heard in the studio.
|
|
|
|
|
|