Taylor Swift buys domain name to thwart smut obsessives
I have a sense that Taylor Swift has become the latest high profile victim of a bizarre phenomenon that borders on blackmail.
The US removes its restriction on supplying military equipment to Egypt, which was imposed when the military took power in Cairo nearly two years ago.
Recovery teams in the French Alps build a new road to access the wreckage and remains of the Germanwings crash, as 80 different strands of victims’ DNA are identified.
I have a sense that Taylor Swift has become the latest high profile victim of a bizarre phenomenon that borders on blackmail.
On Friday we will see the deepest eclipse of the Sun so far this century. For most of us, of course, the view will be ruined by cloud, fog and rain just as it was for the total eclipse in 1999.
As thousands of people join the biggest-ever rally to protest against the shortage of affordable housing, film director Ken Loach tells Channel 4 News the shortage is crucifying people’s life chances.
A new wonder material discovered by two Russian scientists at Manchester University, graphene promises to transform people’s everyday lives. But what is it? And how will it be used?
Writer Jon Ronson tells Jon Snow people get torn apart on the internet, just for telling a joke “that landed badly”. But can online shaming bring about positive social change?
The power of UK security agencies to access private communications will be examined in a parliamentary report due to be published on Thursday.
The depressing truth: the watch doesn’t have to be a killer product to keep its place in Apple’s stable.
A first time attempt to fly around the world in a solar powered plane starts in Abu Dhabi.
Ex Machina was meant to be a thrilling expose of the dangers of artificial intelligence – in fact the film simply revealed how limited our conceptions of AI really are.
A radical plan for transplanting a head onto someone else’s body could happen by 2017, a scientist claims.
UK researchers have created a programme capable of playing a large number of computer games, looking only at the information on the screen.
According to the latest Snowden claims, British spies can hack into your personal and work email, hack sales team records for customer information and then later hide their trails. All all of this is legal.
The US is to export armed drones to sell to its military allies around the world, a move that has been welcomed by the arms industry but provoked outrage among human rights campaigners.