Cars are Doomed if They Can be Hacked Open by Thieves
London's police force reckons wireless car hacking is the new thing we all can't do anything about. So clearly we're best off walking everywhere. Go tech!
London's police force reckons wireless car hacking is the new thing we all can't do anything about. So clearly we're best off walking everywhere. Go tech!
An secret investigation has uncovered the extent of the strange world of Chinese intellectual property laws, and the different tactics that have made the country the global dominator in patent production.
One simple little slip up involving a Bitcoin forum and an email address.
In a recent interview with Vice, a drug dealer from Birmingham, UK, details how he and his associates evade the eyes of the law.
The meaning of internet-speak cuts to the heart of the trial of online Dark Net drug-marketplace Silk Road and its purported leader.
Maybe get a quick game of League of Legends in with PC Plod too.
I'm not the morality police over here, but I'm just going to go ahead and say that people should not scam each other. But if you were going to perpetuate a scam, GoFundMe is a great way to do so.
Journalist Barrett Brown faces 63 months in prison and £594,000 restitution bill.
In case snooping wasn't enough, the US government is also neck-deep in creepy digital impersonation schemes.
Unnamed 18-year-old Southport man arrested on suspicious gaming hacks and 'swatting' attacks.
The Drugwipe drug-driving test kits we told you about before Christmas have now been approved by the government. It goes without saying, but don't snort/smoke and drive, folks. [ITV]
The Z13 is twice as fast as most commercial servers, packs 300 per cent more memory, and will be used in part for preventing fraudulent transactions online
Shock revelation leads to wider denial of responsibility for pedalling drugs online via The Silk Road.
Online messageboard 8chan has had its domain seized by its Bahamas-based registrar. According to the takedown notice, "child abuse" content on the site is to blame.
Customs officers at Futian Port in China stop strange-walking man, before finding 94 phones strapped to his person.
Despite the repeated cries of tech bloggers everywhere, it would seem that the iPod isn't actually dead; it's just gone rogue.