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Retailers say they are using video cameras to watch customers as a way to make shopping in stores more enjoyable, but privacy advocates are skeptical.
A big problem is that DNA scanning, in many cases, cannot yet offer meaningful predictions about a person’s risk for getting a disease.
While exports to the United States might rebound this year, in the long run the decline in western demand and the growing importance of China represent a fundamental shift for the oil market.
An auditor exposed major gaps in federal oversight of the organic food industry, pointing to numerous shortcomings of the National Organic Program.
Instead of worrying about the recovery of the real estate market, some Canadians are concerned about the prospect of a price bubble.
Finding a good one takes research and perseverance, but unfortunately, the typical search is made under duress and with little time available.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn?s proposed European Resolution Authority would be supported by funds from governments and the private sector to deal with failures of large banks.
The Senate Banking Committee, which is set to begin consideration of a bill that would overhaul financial regulations, received 359 amendments by the Friday deadline.
Wealthy benefactors are becoming more attuned to the particulars of setting up prizes, sometimes worth millions, to achieve their goals or draw attention to causes.
Because of a late application, a patent on Angiomax will expire this year instead of 2014, potentially costing a drug maker hundreds of millions.
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Dispatches from Silicon Valley.
Two months after Google shook the world with its threat to leave China on censorship and hacking concerns, there are increasing signs that an exit is imminent as the two sides refuse to back down. Following are the possible paths the world?s largest search company could take -- and the possible reactions from Beijing.
Twitter has taken out South by Southwest presenters in the past, leading to very public — and very embarrassing — onstage meltdowns. Here's how you can avoid a similar disaster.
A number of websites ask iPhone developers for money in exchange for "expedited" reviews of their apps. One site even refuses to review apps unless developers pay them a fee. The FTC says paid reviews aren't illegal, but the practice should raise questions about a publication's credibility.
Google is working with Intel and Sony to develop a new class of Internet-enabled televisions and set top boxes, according to the New York Times. Will this finally bring us the converged living room hub that Media Center, Apple TV and Tivo haven't?
The company that makes cool digital cameras wants you to find it online soon at http://canon. It's the first of what could a wave of new top level domains for companies, and it's just one sign of big changes coming to the net's naming conventions.
Everybody knows Google is one of the net?s big kids, but how big is it exactly? Well, as Arbor Networks measures it, if Google were an ISP it would be the third largest in the world and the fastest growing ? if you are measuring the amount of traffic passed from its network to another.
This week's behind-the-scenes podcast focuses on 10 years after the dot-com boom and bust. Senior editor Joanna Pearlstein hosts a conversation between contributors Matt Honan and Steven Leckart about the dot-com era's major players, total failures and missed opportunities.
PayPal's latest upgrade to the PayPal iPhone app lets you pay (and be paid) by bumping fists.
The company's sensors, Linux modules and other parts make DIY electronics projects easier and more accessible than ever. But will open source hardware really democratize production of a million geeky gadgets?
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