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Murdoch to Google: Search This
The News Corp. billionaire is threatening to pull his newspapers' content from Google searches. Douglas Rushkoff on why it may take a real conservative to save journalism from the free Web.
Google Declares War on Facebook
After the search giant upgraded its social-networking tools yesterday, Douglas Rushkoff says its battle with Facebook might come with collateral damage: your real-life friendships.
Twitter's Gangster Spam Trap
Twitter's innocuous-looking mobster game has turned the micro-messaging service into an unstoppable spam service. And just like the real Mafia, once you join, you can never get out.
iPhone's Bad Business
Millions of users of the Apple's wildly popular phone just found out it no longer works with office email systems. Did Steve Jobs' company betray its users?
The ESPN Porn Scam
The scandal surrounding the illegal nude video of ESPN star Erin Andrews has reached your computer. Douglas Rushkoff on how an army of hackers is using porn to break into your bank account.
How Iran's Hackers Killed Big Brother
Tehran's streets may be bloody, says Douglas Rushkoff, but the opposition has won the digital war. The battleground: Facebook and Twitter. The weapons: bandwidth and hacking. The prize: the end of totalitarianism.
Facebook's Fatal Error
At 12:01 a.m. Saturday, 200 million Facebook users will begin a mad scramble to claim a user name. This was also the moment, says Douglas Rushkoff, when Facebook could become obsolete.
How I Became an Enemy of the People
When author Douglas Rushkoff was mugged and blogged about it, neighbors didn't offer support-they attacked him for threatening their property values. In his new book, Life Inc., he writes about how people have come to act like corporations.
Obama's Internet Misfire
The president's announcement Friday of a new czar to protect our cybersecurity misses the point, says Douglas Rushkoff. We need a generation of hand-to-hand digital soldiers, not armchair generals.


















