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This is one of the most frightening hacking stories I've read, because I immediately recognized my own vulnerability. 

The victim, Matt Honan, is a writer for Wired, where he...

This is one of the most frightening hacking stories I've read, because I immediately recognized my own vulnerability. 

The victim, Matt Honan, is a writer for Wired, where he tells the story of the nightmare he experienced over the weekend. It's worth reading to understand what your own vulnerability might be, but it's also worth reading as a piece of journalism: Honan does a very nice job of telling a complicated personal story.

Honan is a familiar figure to many online, and to readers of Wired. Despite his intimacy with the Web, he admits that he made a mistake that he should never have made:

Had I been regularly backing up the data on my MacBook, I wouldn't have had to wrorry about losing more than a year's...

Last weekend in North Carolina, I saw the future of science writing.

Some 300 bright, enthusiastic and energetic science bloggers--scientists and journalists among them--gathered in Research Triangle Park for ScienceOnline 2011. The mood was vastly...

Last weekend in North Carolina, I saw the future of science writing.

Some 300 bright, enthusiastic and energetic science bloggers--scientists and journalists among them--gathered in Research Triangle Park for ScienceOnline 2011. The mood was vastly different from what you might encounter in a traditional newsroom. The black humor, cynicism and ironic detachment of newspaper newsrooms was replaced by an eagerness to learn and a willingness to share. These folks--and I count myself among them--love what they do. Unlike me, they don't crow about discovering the future of science writing--they are creating it.

The conference, run by Bora Zivkovic, the editor of...