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Follow-Up: How France's "Free" Cell Phones Really Did Disrupt The Industry

Last week a new French effort to shake up the cell phone industry began when Free.fr launched an all-but-free, unlimited cell phone service. It was expected to wake up the bigger industry players--and now we know it has.READ»

ROBOTS   |  Comment

This Week In Bots: Self-Driving Cars, Robo-Surgeons, And Foxconn's Robot Army

Would you let a robot chauffeur you around town, twirl its arms violently as it worked on a production line, or even perform surgery on you? Say yes--because the future is now.READ»

Mais Non! France's "Free" Cell Phone Service Will (Likely) Never Work In The U.S.

Free.fr is offering an all-but-free cell phone service that promises truly unlimited data, voice, and SMS monthly tariffs. Americans shouldn't hold their breath for the same sort of innovation any time soon--the existing carriers would strangle it.READ»

Bastille Day Bulletin: Nearly One-Third Of French Citizens Storm The Gates Of Online Piracy

The French anti-piracy law is one of the strictest around, and authorities have now tracked down 18 million pirates. What does this say about the nature of piracy? And the future of music?READ»

FAST FEED   |  Comment

Obvious Move: Biz Stone Steps Away From Twitter For Mysterious Venture; Plus, Trouble In Tumblville

The Fast Company reader's essential rundown of people and companies making moves in your space. Updated all day by FastCompany.com's editors.READ»

LAW   |  Comment

France's Odd Internet Laws Explained: Fairness Vs. Innovation

There's a method to the madness of France's curious Internet bans--an underlying philosophy that's causing conflict with companies around the world.READ»

Google, eBay, and Facebook Take on France Over User Privacy

It's not every day that Web giants like Google and Facebook take on governments to protect their users' privacy. Typically, it's the other way around.READ»

IFIVE   |  Comment

iFive: Twitter's Value Doubles, Al Jazeera's Social Show, Verifone Embraces Wireless Payment, PS3s Impounded, China Hacks France

Welcome to the start of the week--let our iFive summary bring you up to speed with the early tech news:READ»

Wikipedia Goes Royal

"Versailles has always been a place of innovation," says the new "resident Wikipedian" who'll be living there for six months.READ»

Undersea Nuclear Power Stations Could Be En Route to France

Nuclear submarine technology (truly cold war terror science) may one day have peaceful payoffs: A French firm is planning modified submarine nuclear power stations, able to provide clean juice to remote communities.READ»

Bike Computer Study Proves Rush-Hour Cycling Is Faster Than Driving

Biking is faster than driving--in Lyon, at least, according to a study of onboard computer data from the French city's Velo'v bikesharing program. And that's in a city with no bike lanes.READ»

GOOGLE   |  Comment

Google's 600 Gigabyte Privacy Fiasco, by the Numbers

Google inadvertently collected about 600 gigabytes of personal data. Here's what that amount means to you.READ»

NIKE   |  Comment

Lance Armstrong Last Tour de France Is a Victory Lap for Nike, Livestrong

The Tour de France kicks off this weekend, which means Nike's monstrous marketing machine starts to focus on something that isn't spherical. (Which is good news since Kotaku's Luke Plunkett posted a sneaky observation on Twitter that ...READ»

DESIGN   |  Comment

Infographic of the Day: CNN's World Cup Twitter Site

A new interactive feature lets you follow trending topics on Twitter in real time.READ»

GOOGLE   |  Comment

Google Hands Over "Rogue Data" to Euro Authorities, Apologizes Again

Google said yesterday that it will comply with European rulings and hand over the data it snagged from private, unsecured wireless networks. READ»

BMW   |  Comment

Jeff Koons and BMW Unveil Art Car at Paris Le Mans [UPDATED]

The 17th BMW Art Car was unveiled in France yesterday, two months after artist Jeff Koons had previewed it before the world's media. Originally a 3-D computer-aided design, it's lost a dimension, been printed onto vinyl and wrapped ...READ»