The Guardian:
It's impossible to keep your personal information private on a social networking site. We need stronger privacy protectionsIn September, Facebook lost a $9.5m class-action lawsuit and subsequently shuttered its Beacon service (Read More)
The Huffington Post | Full News Feed:
Students at MIT have devised a way to identify people who are gay by analyzing their Facebook profiles. The method works by examining who a person is friends with, and drawing conclusions based on the characteristics of those (Read More)
Valleywag:
Are you quietly stalking someone and too dense to figure out their sexual orientation from Google searches, Flickr party photos and real-life gossip? Well, a couple of MIT geniuses invented just the tool for you.The best part (Read More)
Gawker:
Are you quietly stalking someone and too dense to figure out their sexual orientation from Google searches, Flickr party photos and real-life gossip? Well, a couple of MIT geniuses invented just the tool for you. The best par (Read More)
Gawker:
So you think you can spot a gay in the wild? Oh really! Because according to the New York Post, male sexual ambiguity is rendering mere mortals incapable of such callous judgmental accuracy. What...
. (Read More)
NY Post:
IF it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it might be a straight guy. From the sleekly coiffed power players on "Mad Men" to socialite-seducing lothario fashion designers, baseball player-branded perfume and hockey pla (Read More)
CNN:
Apple is maintaining a double-standard when it comes to gay-themed iPhone apps, a developer claims. Attempting to draw publicity, Terry Ray claims that his iGaydar title was rejected from the App Store on the same day as Bru (Read More)
observer.guardian.co.uk:
Ten years ago, Henry Badenhorst helped a friend find a date online - and the idea for Gaydar was born. But with success came scandal - and the tragic death of his long-term partner. Here, the man behind the world's biggest da (Read More)
The Guardian:
21st-century solution to loneliness or cringe-inducing cyber hell? Nearly five million Britons are searching for love online, but are they looking in the wrong place? Tanya Gold investigatesI am in a cafe in London, waiting f (Read More)
observer.guardian.co.uk:
Fed up with the raucous gay scenes of Mykonos and Ibiza, Richard Bence discovers a low-key, bohemian alternative in Puglia's quiet covesI first heard about Puglia when a friend moved there to start a new life with his Italian (Read More)