politicsScienceClimate Scientists Used to Just Get Angry. Now They're Taking ActionBy Lizzie WadeSecurityBritain's terrorist warnings index crashes 'twice a week'By James TempertonBusinessGovernment accused of 'rubber stamping' mass surveillance lawBy Matt BurgessBusinessThis is what the spending review means for tech and scienceBy Nicole KobieSecurityFrench 'state of emergency' includes website bans, social media blocksBy Cara McGooganBusinessWill David Cameron's £10m plane save money?By Cara McGooganScienceTurning Away Refugees Won't Fight Terrorism, and Might Make It WorseBy Nick StocktonSecurityYes, the NSA Worried About Whether Spying Would BackfireBy Issie LapowskyBusinessNHS wants McLaren's F1 live data in hospitals by 2018By Cara McGooganBusinessGovernment demands for Facebook data spike 43 percentBy Matt BurgessBusinessPorn Lords: aged peers tackle online pornographyBy Matt BurgessSecurityInvestigatory Powers Bill: questions that must be answeredBy Matt BurgessBusinessFacebook Now Lets Candidates Target Political FanaticsBy Issie LapowskySecurityHackers' alleged KKK unmasking is a confusing messBy James TempertonCultureNews just in: the world won't be particularly different in 2016By Russell DaviesBusinessSomeday, Tech Will End Our Dumb Two-Party SystemBy Drew CurtisBusinessDonald Trump Supporters Are More Susceptible to ClickbaitBy Issie LapowskyBusinessMEPs vote in favour of giving Snowden asylum in EUBy James TempertonBusinessChina to end decades-long one-child policyBy Emily ReynoldsBusinessEnergy minister had to ask if climate change was realBy Matt BurgessBusinessNet neutrality at risk as EU heads for crucial voteBy James TempertonBusinessThe GOP Has a Tech Talent Problem It Might Not SolveBy Issie LapowskyBusinessRevealed: Myanmar's jade trade is run by former junta membersBy Greg WilliamsCultureMP duped by 'Brass Eye' made chair of psychoactive substances committeeBy Cara McGooganMore Stories