Top stories
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Bomb threats made on Twitter to female journalists
Guardian columnist Hadley Freeman and Independent writer Grace Dent among women threatened
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UK set to ban Google Glass for drivers
Google's smart glasses will distract drivers, says Department of Transport. By Jemima Kiss
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Aaron Swartz report from MIT fails to assuage family's criticism of university
Friends and family of the hacking prodigy who killed himself in January remain critical of university's role in prosecution
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Alan Rusbridger reddit AMA: Things we learned
Key points from the live AMA (ask me anything) on reddit with the Guardian's editor in chief Alan Rusbridger
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How much Sinofsky gets - and Surface didn't
Ex-Windows chief, who is in line for a $10m payoff, is barred from joining Apple, Google and other tech rivals before 2014 . By Charles Arthur
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Amazon to launch Kindle Singles ebook of Barack Obama interview
US president's visit to Amazon warehouse continues to spark criticism from the books industry. By Stuart Dredge
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Samsung gives Galaxy S4 benchmarking software a boost – but says it's to help users
Tests uncover 'benchmark booster' code for graphics processor, but Samsung says top speeds are only denied to some games. By Charles Arthur
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Wii U sales fall – but Nintendo positive
Keith Stuart: The company sold just 160,000 units of the console in the last financial quarter, while financial figures show a slight recovery
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Android fragmentation 'worst ever' – or good?
Dataset shows there are 11,868 different Android devices, scores of screen sizes and eight OS versions. By Charles Arthur
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Gamer communities: the positive side
Keith Stuart: Recently we've been bombarded with stories of abuse on Twitter and in gaming forums. It's time, perhaps, to place this in context
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Thai Bitcoin exchange suspends trading
Thailand's central bank declares Bitcoins illegal, according to company overseeing virtual currency in country
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App for 'smart' fitness-tracking socks
Sensoria footwear promises to track stride, speed, distance and calories (but sorry, they won't walk themselves to the washing machine when you're finished). By Stuart Dredge
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Autographer's automatic photography is seductive - but what about privacy?
The latest wearable camera gives a brief taste of the implications of always on-photography – and it's consumer CCTV. By Christian Payne
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Twitter chiefs to face MPs over threats
Cross-party group to quiz Twitter executives over complaints that they have failed to protect women from online abuse. By Andrew Sparrow
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Online abuse: one woman's gaming experience
A commenter describes the reactions of male players she beat in an MMORPG – and the change when she played as a 'man'. By Charles Arthur
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How Vice's Tim Pool used Google Glass to cover Istanbul protests
'I want to show you what it's like to be there as best I can, even if that ends with me running full-speed into a cafe and rubbing lemons all over my face after being tear-gassed…' By Stuart Dredge
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GTA 5: new screenshots – in pictures
Gallery (11 pictures) A selection of screenshots from Rockstar's latest GTA instalment, featuring quad bikes, base jumping and a boat inspired by Deacon Blue
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UK losing war against internet crime, MPs warn
Commons committee declares cybercrime more valuable than the drugs industry and says more needs to be done to stop it
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Gamer rage: can it be stopped?
Keith Stuart: Two recent twitter storms have led to death threats for one game designer and the cancellation of a new project for another. Is this just the way things are in the video game community now?
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Will the Leap Motion Controller change how we use computers?
The new gadget will let you interact with your computer using gestures – does that mean Minority Report has finally arrived? By Jonty Sharples
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Google Glass: developers encouraged to build 'Glassware' apps in Android
Glass Development Kit isn't ready yet, but Google wants developers to start work on apps while waiting. By Stuart Dredge
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Edward Snowden's not the story. The fate of the internet is
The press has lost the plot over the Snowden revelations. The fact is that the net is finished as a global network, and that US firms' cloud services cannot be trusted, writes John Naughton