Welcome to the final article in our three-part series on the history of the Internet. If you haven’t already, catch up with part one and part two. As a refresher, here’s the story so far: The ARPANET ...
Starlink is illegal in Iran, but people are still using the satellite internet service to get around the government's ...
Iranians are using Starlink to get online during the government's near-total internet shutdown.
Penn engineers have taken quantum networking from the lab to Verizon’s live fiber network, using a silicon “Q-chip” that speaks the same Internet Protocol as the modern web. The system pairs classical ...
From data centers to AI to 5G internet, how we use the internet has a much bigger effect on our Earth than we might imagine. Cierra was an associate writer for CNET's broadband team, covering all ...
Not all web browsers are created equal when it comes to protecting your privacy. Here's which browser to avoid and which ones to use instead. As much as the internet has changed over the past ...
Researchers used the Q‑Chip to send quantum data over standard fiber using Internet Protocol (IP), showing that future quantum networks could run on today’s internet infrastructure. When you purchase ...
The internet is bigger and more fragile than ever, thanks to larger attacks. Much of that growth is driven by bots and AI crawlers. Increasingly, we use smartphones and satellites to access the web.
Because of its universality, DNS has become a natural enforcement layer for network policies, whether for security, ...
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