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Spam experiment overloads inboxes
Some 50 people from around the world were invited to surf unprotected for a month
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The hits and misses of Microsoft
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Sweden approves wiretapping law
Sweden passes new laws on surveillance, labelled Europe's most far-reaching eavesdropping plan.
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Google's experimental Gmail toys
Google opens testing of new Gmail features to its biggest audience as it calls on tens of millions of users to try them.
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Why typewriters beat computers
They're clunky, dirty and can't access the internet, yet every year thousands of people buy typewriters when they could probably afford a computer. Why?
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How did no-win no-fee change things?
It's a decade since no-win no-fee rules were extended to most civil court cases, but what change has the now notorious "conditional fee agreement" brought?
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Portrait of Blair as PM unveiled
A portrait of Tony Blair, painted in his last few months as prime minister, has been unveiled in Westminster.
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Cyber criminals to target mobiles
Hi-tech criminals are starting to turn their attention to mobile phones and networks, say security experts.
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Phishing attacks soar in the UK
Phishing attacks by fraudsters more than tripled in the first three months of the year, experts say.
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Sex offenders face website bans
Sex offenders' e-mail addresses are to be passed on to social networking sites under new government plans.
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Q&A: Children and safer net use
Following a report into children's use of social network sites the BBC news website looks at what parents can do to keep offspring safe.
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Scotland 'badly hit' by T5 chaos
Business leaders claim Scotland is suffering disproportionately from the chaos at Heathrow.
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China's battle to police the web
Web users in China are able to view the BBC News website for the first time. So how does the great firewall of China work?
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Pros and cons of being a DIY lawyer
"It's not easy but just do your research and save yourself a fortune," said Heather Mills this week, after representing herself in court. But what are the benefits and the drawbacks?
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How to blog safely across the world
Some tips from Reporters Without Borders on how you can blog safely and evade government censorship.
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E-mail is ruining my life!
Why one-third of workers are suffering from e-mail stress as the volume in their inboxes continues to grow.
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'Shake and rattle' as quake hits
People across many parts of Wales feel the biggest tremor to hit the UK for nearly 25 years.
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Are the watchers being watched?
A surveillance state does not care who it keeps an eye on, says regular columnist Bill Thompson.
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Super scam me
Some see them as a joke, a few even take them at their word, but to most of us spam e-mails that promise to "enlarge your manhood" have become an everyday pest. Simon Cox, of Radio 4's the Investigation, set out to discover who is behind them.
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E-mails reveal data check warning
Officials were concerned about security before 25m personal files were lost, e-mails reveal.
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