
Story by
Matt Brian
Matt is the former News Editor for The Next Web. You can follow him on Twitter, subscribe to his updates on Facebook and catch up with him Matt is the former News Editor for The Next Web. You can follow him on Twitter, subscribe to his updates on Facebook and catch up with him on Google+.
If you didn’t have the opportunity to catch up on your daily fix of technology news over the weekend, the TNW Weekend Roundup will bring you quickly up to speed with what happened on Saturday and Sunday, linking you to the most popular and discussed stories here on The Next Web:
Amazon Appstore Reportedly Launching March 22
Internet retail behemoth Amazon is set to launch its third-party Android apps marketplace on March 22, a source has revealed to Wired.
Ethics and a fool and his money
Some people say we all have a moral obligation to seperate fools from their money. That is nonsense of course. But how far would you go to protect a fool from losing his money? Especially if you are the person who he could be losing it to?
BBC News tries adding reader comments to stories, but should it bother?
After having trialled it on a small number of stories in recent months, the BBC is set to roll out in-article commenting on its website, but in a very ‘BBC’ way.
Security hole spotted in Tumblr
Over the weekend, a gaping security hole in Tumblr was found, which exposed more than 748 lines of sensitive configuration information out into the open.
In Defense of Digg and Internet Evolution
Last week, Digg founder Kevin Rose announced he was stepping down from his position at the company. Many see it as the end of Digg, but we disagree.
Facebook acquires Snaptu. Set to bring more advanced apps to almost every phone
Facebook acquired Israeli mobile apps company Snaptu for a reported $70 million yesterday. The company’s likely to help Facebook roll out Facebook apps to virtually any mobile phone.
AT&T to Acquire T-Mobile USA For $39 Billion
AT&T and Deutsche Telekom have agreed the sale of T-Mobile USA for $39 billion in cash and stocks. The combined customer base of the telecoms giant will be 130 million users, over 40% of the US population.
Get the TNW newsletter
Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.