How Anonymous Picks Targets, Launches Attacks, and Takes Powerful Organizations Down
Inside the hacker ecosystem.
Inside the hacker ecosystem.
Quinn Norton Wired Jul 2012 25min Permalink
The story of an opportunity missed.
Cyrus Farivar Ars Technica Jun 2012 20min Permalink
How technological progress slowed from its 20th-century peak, why we’ve shifted from changing reality to simply simulating reality, and whether capitalism is the true culprit.
David Graeber The Baffler Jun 2012 Permalink
The game’s past, present, and future.
Noah Davis The Verge Jun 2012 15min Permalink
Shiva Ayyadurai told the world he invented email. Not everyone agreed.
Janelle Nanos Boston Magazine Jun 2012 15min Permalink
Teaching Ted Kaczynski’s anti-technology ideas.
Jeffrey R. Young The Chronicle of Higher Education May 2012 25min Permalink
A profile of Hector Xavier Monsegur, aka Sabu, a hacker star of Anonymous and resident of a New York City housing project.
Steve Fishman New York Jun 2012 20min Permalink
The autopsy of a once-dominant site.
An exposé of Internet Marketers.
Joseph L. Flatley The Verge May 2012 45min Permalink
From failure to Pixar, Steve Jobs’ “wilderness years.”
Brent Schendler Fast Company Apr 2012 Permalink
A profile of Mark Zuckerberg, savvy CEO.
Henry Blodget New York May 2012 20min Permalink
On board the Perl Whirl 2000, a conference of hard-coding geeks on a luxury cruise ship.
Steve Silberman Wired Oct 2000 35min Permalink
How a lonely, self-taught hacker found his way into the private emails of movie stars – and into the underworld of the celebrity-skin business.
David Kushner GQ May 2012 15min Permalink
On the relationship between Stanford and Silicon Valley.
Ken Auletta New Yorker Apr 2012 30min Permalink
Jonathan Blow is both the video game industry’s most cynical critic and its most ambitious game developer. As he finishes his indescribable game-opus, a trip inside the head of a videogame auteur.
Taylor Clark The Atlantic May 2012 30min Permalink
A history of the cell phone ringtone.
Many recent hip-hop songs make terrific ringtones because they already sound like ringtones. The polyphonic and master-tone versions of “Goodies,” by Ciara, for example, are nearly identical. Ringtones, it turns out, are inherently pop: musical expression distilled to one urgent, representative hook. As ringtones become part of our environment, they could push pop music toward new levels of concision, repetition, and catchiness.
Sasha Frere-Jones New Yorker Mar 2005 Permalink
From Tetris to Angry Birds, an examination of “stupid games.”
Sam Anderson New York Times Magazine Apr 2012 20min Permalink
An Iowa dad’s surprisingly short path from commentor to screenwriter.
Jason Fagone Wired Mar 2012 20min Permalink
After years of avoiding the uncomfortable truths about how his gadgets are made, a Mac fanboy travels to Foxconn to see for himself.
Update 3/16/12: This American Life retracted this story today after it was revealed to have “contained significant fabrications.”
Mike Daisey This American Life Jan 2012 30min Permalink
A report from Austin, Texas as it turns into a dot-com hotspot.
Helen Thorpe New York Times Magazine Aug 2000 15min Permalink
The beginnings of the best-selling video game, from a chapter of David Kushner’s new book on the subject.
David Kushner Gamespot Mar 2012 15min Permalink
In which the author’s wife attempts to break the world record in Tetris.
Billy Baker The Boston Globe Aug 2007 25min Permalink
The artist discusses her latest record, Biophilia, science and music education.
Up until she developed a vocal-cord nodule a few years ago, Björk made a point of not investigating how that instrument worked. “With arrangements and lyrics,” she says, squinting over her coffee, “I work more with the left side of my brain. But my voice has always been very right brain. I didn’t try to analyze it at all. I didn’t even know until I started all this voice work, two years ago, what my range was. I didn’t want to let the academic side into that—I worried the mystery would go.”
Nitsuh Abebe New York Feb 2012 10min Permalink
When computer science legend Jim Gray disappeared, his friends and colleagues – including Bill Gates and Larry Ellison – used every technological tool at their disposal to try to find him.
Steve Silberman Wired Jul 2007 30min Permalink
He was fired from the company he helped create, YouSendIt. Then the cyberattacks started.