This week, Twitter/X removed headlines from links shared to the platform, and users have had some fun rewriting history.
The company is seeking an October 13 closure date, depending on final approval from the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority.
Ring’s Million Dollar Search for Extraterrestrials will feature a bona fide astrobiologist serving as a judge.
Vela is nearly 1,000 light-years from Earth and is spewing astonishingly energetic gamma-rays into space.
The company is walking away from a previously awarded $125.6 million contract from NASA to design and build a commercial space station.
Elon Musk's X is stripping links and news stories of their headlines, and ad revenue continues to decline.
The image creator comes as the app begins rolling out social networking features in addition to its news feed.
Meta's new Emu AI algorithm allows users to generate unsavory content involving weapons and nudity while blocking only certain explicit phrases.
Paramount uploaded Mean Girls to TikTok in 23 separate parts in a desperate attempt to make the already-quotable movie even more viral.
Northrop Grumman appears to have exited the race to build an ISS replacement, while Blue Origin is redirecting staff away from its Orbital Reef project.
The name of Elon Musk's social media company may get even more confusing.
The ChatGPT-esque playlist generator was found in Spotify's backend code.
The cat, Tux, was left behind in a Lyft after the driver left the destination before the passenger could remove her from the backseat.
The actor warned his Instagram followers of the ad campaign while Hanks and SAG-AFTRA remain on strike over the use of AI in Hollywood.
Zoomers and Gen Alpha involved in the study pick up their phones an average of 51 times and spend an average of nearly two hours on TikTok each day.
Talks between the two are reportedly breaking down as Blue Origin works on the Blue Moon lunar lander and Sierra Space focuses on its Dream Chaser spaceplane.
Exploratory talks between big-wigs at Apple and Microsoft in 2020 reportedly included discussions of Apple taking on the beleaguered search engine.
CEO Tim Sweeney cited decreasing revenue from Fortnite as a reason for the layoffs and said in a memo that "we’ve been spending way more money than we earn."
Following in the footsteps of Netflix, the House of Mouse hopes to rid itself of the freeloaders.
SoftBank CEO and founder Masayoshi Son allegedly put up $1 billion for the project as well as pitched involvement from Japanese chip maker Arm.