Net Neutrality Rules Die on April 23 (theverge.com)
Lawmakers Worry About Rise of Fake Video Technology (thehill.com)
Google is Making it Easier For 911 To Find You in an Emergency (engadget.com)
New York Times CEO: Print Journalism Has Maybe Another 10 Years (cnbc.com)
NSA Sent Coded Messages From Its Twitter To Communicate With Foreign Spies (gizmodo.com)
Turkey Rolls Out Domestic Rival To WhatsApp, Raising Surveillance Concerns (reuters.com)
Google Fiber's Wireless Internet Service Is Leaving Boston (theverge.com)
FCC Chairman Slams Trump Team's Proposal To Nationalize 5G (axios.com)
The Legislative Fight Over Loot Boxes Expands To Washington State (arstechnica.com)
'Memes Have Rights Too': Grumpy Cat Wins $710,000 In Copyright Lawsuit (thewrap.com)
Why People Dislike Really Smart Leaders (scientificamerican.com)
Ask Slashdot: How Would You Explain Einstein's Theories To a Nine-Year-Old?
The Tech Failings of Hawaii's Missile Alert
Ask Slashdot: Is There a Useful Voice-Activated PC? (dailycaring.com)
James Dolan, Co-Creator of SecureDrop, Dead At 36 (gizmodo.com)
SoundCloud Refutes Decreasing Audio Quality, Cites Standard Testing (billboard.com)
Postcard From Pyongyang: The Airport Now Has Wi-Fi, Sort of (apnews.com)