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Multiple high-profile websites are unavailable today in protest at proposed anti-piracy legislation in the US.
OpenMoko - the group behind the open-source FreeRunner smartphone - have launched an offline, pocket-sized device designed to read Wikipedia on the go.
Amazon has added additional datasets to its EC2 cloud computing system, surpassing 1TB of easily-accessible data from various public sources.
The Encyclopaedia Brittanica is to allow edits, amendments, and suggestions from web users - via a staff of professional editors, of course - in an attempt to best Wikipedia at its own game.
Google has announced the launch of Knol, a new Wikipedia-style site aimed at allowing those knowledgeable on a topic to create informative pages and collaborate on others.
Startup WEbook is hoping to become the Wikipedia of your bookshelf, with a beta service allowing authors to collaborate.
The founder of Wikipedia has revealed some details on his community-developed Internet search service, which is set to hit the net late in 2007.
The company that owns Wikipedia has announced its formal plans for a search engine.
One of the editors on high from Wikipedia lied about his own background to the press. Practical joke, or credibility blunder?
Pro golf star Fuzzy Zoeller has sued over an apparently incorrect Wiki entry. Of course, Wiki itself can't be sued, but its ISP can...
Is Web 2.0 fundamentally communist at heart? Is Digg Karl Marx's ultimate legacy? Did the cold war really end, as America battles Russia over illegal MP3s? Rich Swinburne evaluates the old-fashioned politics of the web.
Online encyclopaedia, Wikipedia, accidentally banned an entire nation from using its resources for 12 hours yesterday, after vandals continually edited articles on the US, sex and Muhammad.
The Chinese government has quietly removed its censorship of Wikipedia. Could we be seeing a turning point in Chinese free speech?
Hackers have found a way to exploit Wikipedia. Not a good step forward for internet security!
"I thought it was a joke website" says sorry dude in his defence - but ends up losing job after coming clean.
Wikipedia is tightening submission rules after complaints - but is it too little, too late?
October 14 2021 | 15:04
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