A vast majority of the world's software runs on open-source code. Can it be secured?
But it's their way, with their virtual machines, because your life is nothing without Microsoft.
Meta said it won't back down from its threat to pull news access on Instagram and Facebook following the recent passage of the Online News Act.
Former COO V. Pappas resigns as the company faces dozens of attempts to ban the app on the state and federal level.
While we're still more than half a year out from seeing new Vision apps in wild, early SDK tests show visionOS contains a Control Center and virtual keyboard.
Musk made the determination in a reply to a user who said he didn’t wish to be called “cis," claimed he was called "cissy" by trans activists.
Opera One isn't the first browser with an AI chatbot, but its innovative design makes AI an actually-useful part of your daily internet experience.
The iPhone's Visual Look Up will soon be able to understand your car's pleas for help.
Spotify could release a special premium subscription for lossless audio soon. Apple Music offers it free.
Make sure the apps you install are ones you can rely on.
With no communication from the company, publishers relying on Facebook traffic are at the mercy of the inscrutable algorithm, and they say it's punishing them.
Ads from household-name brands and nonprofits are appearing beside clips of a film blaming Jews for causing World War II.
The ghost of the right-wing social media platform Parler lives on in emails from right-wing darlings trying to squeeze money out of old users.
Twitter is facing yet another lawsuit. 17 music labels representing Beyonce, Taylor Swift, and others are alleging major copyright infringement.
The company has been skipping out on rent and other bills since Elon Musk took over. Now a judge says whatever Twitter employees remain have to go.
Instagram Notes now lets users set music in away messages, while the Metaverse flagship Horizon Worlds now lets users text friends. Is this the singularity?
The former Twitter CEO discussed efforts Twitter took to push back against takedown requests from India, Turkey, and other governments' repression.
"Let’s dig our heels in (4 inches or flat!) and build Twitter 2.0 together,” Yaccarino tweeted.
The conservative news network claims Carlson's new conspiracy-clad Twitter show violates a non-compete clause of his Fox contract.
Earlier this week, Spotify announced layoffs involving 200 employees, including those in the company's Gimlet Media and Parcast podcast studios.
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