Faceless freedom: YouTube adds face-blurring tool
Anonymity is now easy and free.
Anonymity is now easy and free.
If Amazon is allowed to rule the e-book market, "we will all suffer."
So far, the best way to develop immunity to malaria remains getting infected.
Apple also says outside techs shouldn't remove the battery "for any reason."
Based on Microsoft’s App-V technology, new Office isn’t the usual SaaS, exactly.
A telephone company wants national security letters declared unconstitutional.
With Dropbox users getting spammed, investigation is underway.
Updated applications augment, but can't replace, their desktop counterparts.
Solo tablet and smartphone owners face higher prices, little gain with new plans.
Falcon gets busy, and the Delta 2 rocket comes out of retirement.
Mars Rover Landing is part Lunar Lander, all sharing science with kids.
The Internet makes it easy to focus on your symptoms.
$21 billion in precious metals are used each year, and most of it is lost.
Advocacy group files an amicus brief that could provide a follow-up to Jones.
Ars compares apps for keeping track of the 2012 Olympics and visiting London.
But the brain-altering mix of lights and sounds can be hard to play.
But Motorola has a plan to maintain device availability in the US.
New espionage malware has been found targeting systems in the Middle East.
Taking pictures through translucent materials is also possible.
Knowing how a bird sees can help us design planes that are easier to spot.
Our strange search for the other side of The Oatmeal/FunnyJunk story.
The company is also looking at porting additional titles to the platform.
The incident highlights how the DMCA can hinder free speech.
It won't put an end to bad presentations, but PowerPoint 2013 is a step forward.
Defenses added to Android Jelly Bean make it harder to hijack end users' phones.
Envy those who succeed by making up their data? Here's how you can, too!
Grum is dismantled after the plug is pulled on its command and control servers.
Will third-party browsers be able to compete on Windows 8?
Windows 8 tablets, PCs, and software will all arrive in October.
The currency's value has soared 40 percent in the last month.
The judge said Apple is entitled to its opinion on his earlier ruling, though.
WikiLeaks uses a French advocacy group to accept credit card donations.
Developers given free access to ARM-based servers in OpenStack testbed.
Apple was most likely working on iPad prototypes as early as 2002.
Kim Dotcom loses a sympathetic New Zealand judge.
Mozilla has also removed favicons from the browser's navigation bar.
State adds social media to 2008 online registration setup.
RelayRides, in a single bound, has vastly expanded the number of available cars.
BMG continues its censorship campaign with a second takedown notice.
Sprint provides everything, from devices to support.
Supported apps are quite limited when it comes to shortcuts, though.
Manufacturers are producing 4,000 Raspberry Pi units per day.
AT&T; might charge extra for the feature. Is it worth shelling out the money?
The technology integrates capacitive touch sensors into the display circuitry.
Microsoft didn't offer the EU "browser ballot," says a fix is in the works.
Megaupload had servers and customers in the US, even filed a lawsuit here.
Mayer, Google employee #20, takes on gargantuan task of turning around Yahoo.
Are you ready for the next generation of Microsoft Office?
Genre list includes categories of productivity software.
Of non-Newtonian fluids and disappointment.
New users and those just activating Mail will get new icloud.com addresses.
Beware: Messages being sent without notice. Microsoft to roll out a fix soon.
"The service is called RapidShare and not RapidStore," the court held.
Recyclers still dispute the device's compliance with IEEE standards.
Judge David Harvey was speaking out against Trans-Pacific Partnership last week.
And the New York Times says the 7.85" iPad is real.
Weekend Ar(t)s offers five other tracks to sample before this Ars-friendly LP.
A mobile management company called Mformation will cash in.
How an offline actor became an online folk hero to a post-apocalyptic world.
Cloud, touch, social, and app streaming are the cornerstones of the next Office.
Smartphone apps + "ride-sharing" = travel revolution? Two startups say yes.
On Friday the 13th, we recall the scariest tech disasters we somehow survived.