Online Scrabble players are angered by changes made to a mobile version of Scrabble since its takeover by EA
The Supreme Court ruled that Arizona violated federal law when it added a proof-of-citizenship requirement to a federal voter-registration form nearly a decade ago.
John Lewis chairman Charlie Mayfield and Nigel Bogle, co-founder of the Bartle Bogle Hegarty ad agency, are both knighted in the Queen's Birthday Honours list.
Phone metadata, the information at the center of a debate unleashed over a NSA data-collection program, gives police and spies alike one of the most powerful investigative tools ever devised.
Hassan Rohani, a pragmatic, moderate candidate backed by opposition supporters and reformist political parties, was elected as Iran's next president in a landslide vote.
How to get your favourite band to play in your hometown
The Obama administration's dramatic shift in favor of arming Syria's rebels was the product of two months of increasingly unsettling assessments.
Silicon Valley companies are seeking to further distance themselves from government surveillance, though they don't agree on the best approach.
The Daily Mail parrots a controversial league table of lawyers' fees, only to be slapped down by its Sunday stablemate. What can be going on?A special newspaper "analysis" seems to have the Ministry of Justice bang to rights, as Chris Grayling's minions attempt to spin "highly misleading" stories about "fatcat legal aid lawyers". The ministry dishes out league tables...
The FTSE 100 makes a positive start to the week, rising 0.7% in early trade.

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