What We're Reading: Page 274
Industry reads hand-picked by our editors
Jun 22, 2018
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ZDNet
GitHub: Changes to EU copyright law could derail open source distribution
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Ars Technica
Why the Supreme Court’s software patent ban didn’t last
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HR Dive
Google Hire update makes more functions 'one-click'
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Ars Technica
California net neutrality bill gutted as lawmakers cave to AT&T lobbyists
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WSJ CIO Journal
IT's Growing Importance Carries CIO Role to New Heights
Jun 21, 2018
Jun 20, 2018
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Axios
Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile and Sprint will stop selling location data to brokers
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MIT Technology Review
Keeping America first in quantum computing means avoiding these five big mistakes
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Ars Technica
Hackers who sabotaged the Olympic games return for more mischief
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The New York Times
Microsoft Employees Protest Work With ICE, as Tech Industry Mobilizes Over Immigration
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Reuters
Cybersecurity rivals CrowdStrike, Cylance close major funding rounds
Jun 19, 2018
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Axios
IBM's Project Debater AI can beat humans in an argument
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The New York Times
Google's Diversity Efforts, Charted
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Bloomberg
Bitcoin Could Break the Internet, Central Bank Overseer Says
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TechCrunch
Adobe could be the next $10 billion software company
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Ars Technica
Hackers who sabotaged the Olympic games return for more mischief
Jun 18, 2018
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The Wall Street Journal
For Germany, Road to World Cup Repeat Runs Through Data Analytics
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The New York Times
Goodbye, Denver Post. Hello, Blockchain.
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TechCrunch
Facebook’s new AI research is a real eye-opener
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Indeed Hiring Lab
What Are the Most Family-Friendly or Flexible Jobs in the US?
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The Verge
Amazon, Microsoft, and Uber are paying big money to kill a California privacy initiative
Jun 15, 2018
Jun 14, 2018
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Quartz
Cybercrime costs businesses in Kenya, South Africa, Nigeria billions
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Axios
Uber researches AI system to detect users in "unusual state"
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Intel Newsroom
Intel Starts Testing Smallest 'Spin Qubit' Chip for Quantum Computing
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Inverse
A.I. Can Track Human Bodies Through Walls Now, With Just a Wifi Signal
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McKinsey & Company
The best of 'frenemies': Why corporates should embrace, not fear, start-ups--and vice versa