U.S. officials went to extremes to stifle our legal challenge to Bush's warrantless surveillance -- but a federal judge says the program is criminal, anyway.
By Jon B. Eisenberg Jul 9, 2008
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The wireless company's growth slows; mainly because everyone wants the iPhone and its magical app wonderland
By Andrew Leonard
October 26, 2009
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Some big donors to the former president's philanthropy also donate to Hillary's campaign. His private fundraising could be costly to a next Clinton White House.
By Mark Benjamin
October 11, 2007
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A former Internet expert for the FCC concludes that a secret AT&T installation was most likely used for government surveillance.
By Kim Zetter
June 23, 2006
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How the White House is covering up CIA abductions, brutal interrogations and spying on Americans.
By Mark Follman
June 23, 2006
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Salon exclusive: Two former AT&T employees say the telecom giant has maintained a secret, highly secure room in St. Louis since 2002. Intelligence experts say it bears the earmarks of a National Security Agency operation.
By Kim Zetter
June 21, 2006
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A federal judge rules for the Electronic Frontier Foundation in its suit against AT&T for cooperating with the NSA to spy on customers.
By Kim Zetter
May 18, 2006
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An intelligence expert predicts we'll soon learn that cellphone and Internet companies also cooperated with the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on us.
By Kim Zetter
May 15, 2006
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"Net neutrality" loses another battle. Internet doomed, again.
By Andrew Leonard
April 27, 2006
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Telecom giant AT&T plans to charge online businesses to speed their services through its DSL lines. Critics say the scheme violates every principle of the Internet, favors deep-pocketed companies, and is bound to limit what we see and hear online.
By Farhad Manjoo
April 17, 2006
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Internet telephony advocates are predicting that free long distance means the downfall of Big Telecom. But it won't be so easy to topple the king.
By G. Pascal Zachary
March 23, 2004
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Jack Grubman touted AT&T's stock to get his kids into a tony nursery school -- showing that fleecing consumers is like child's play in corporate America.
By Arianna Huffington
November 19, 2002
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AT&T is pushing Japanese-style wireless services in the U.S. But until cellphones are as fun to use in New York as they are in Tokyo, a jaded market is likely to keep yawning.
By Steve Mollman
May 22, 2002
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Telemarketing scammers are the price we pay for lower long-distance bills. Can we afford this kind of bargain?
By Damien Cave
May 8, 2002
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Corporations lavished more money than ever before on this year's political campaigns. So who stands to benefit?
By Katharine Mieszkowski
November 7, 2000
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How Berkeley hackers built the Net's most fabled free operating system on the ashes of the '60s -- and then lost the lead to Linux.
By Andrew Leonard
May 16, 2000
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Part 2: Starting points
By
March 6, 2000
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An unholy alliance of psychologists and advertisers targets kiddie consumers.
By Arthur Allen
February 28, 2000
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The announcement comes as no surprise to longtime supporters.
By Merle Kessler
January 24, 2000
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Peter Eisner of the Center for Public Integrity talks about "The Buying of the President 2000."
By Alicia Montgomery
January 10, 2000
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When the music stops, neither America Online nor Excite@Home is likely to be happy with where it's sitting.
By Scott Rosenberg
October 5, 1999
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My Net connection approaches light speed with cable, but that doesn't guarantee victory over DSL.
By Simson Garfinkel
September 23, 1999
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Tom Jermoluk takes on everyone from America Online to the local phone company in his bid to connect with the consumer.
By Mark Gimein
September 12, 1999
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Roger Ebert agrees: Critics get a raw deal. Plus: Debating disabled scholarship; don't let AT&T control our Internet!
Letters to the Editor
August 25, 1999
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AT&T's battle against open access to its cable system is about Internet infrastructure. What if it were about Internet content?
By Mark Gimein
August 17, 1999