The "Texties" are awards given by my company, TigerText, to individuals who made the most egregious texting errors of the calendar year -- the folks who had the worst "I'm such an idiot for sending that" moments of 2010.
2010 was not a good year for privacy rights. While a growing number of people and companies seem to be concerned about the issue of protecting the most intimate details of our lives, technology is making it harder and harder to do so.
As technology developments bring us new ways to protect our communications it also brings new ways for the mischief-minded and the criminal to take advantage of us.
Some leaks are for the common good. Take the people who stood up to the tobacco industry, ENRON, and the U.S. Military at Abu Ghraib prison. They are heroes. Julian Assange is not.
People today -- including cyber bullies -- have an incredible power to post and share information with the entire world. But who is talking about the responsibility that comes with this power?
Apple's plan to monitor our heartbeats, track our voices, and take pictures of us is so disturbing. These data points being collected covertly aren't just credit cards or pin numbers - but pieces of me.
Are you shocked and appalled by the fact that every aspect of your biography and consumption patterns is tracked, mined, mapped, and sold? Everyone should have the option to opt out of this process.
The new TigerText app--which recalls (but only by coincidence) Tiger Woods' raunchy text messages to his alleged mistresses--can help cheaters keep th...
Tiger Woods, if you're reading this, remember that you've been through what mothers call a "valuable learning experience" and you're probably a "bette...