A new investigation revealed the gay dating app has been pawning off the locations its queer clientele via brokers for years.
If Twitter and YouTube are skeeving you out, the bloc believes it can offer an alternative.
Ambiguous, unimaginative, and kinda hypothetical? Yep, sounds about right.
Once again, you can quit Facebook, but you can never leave.
TikTok was fined for the same reason, the latest the fallout from the country's punitive anti-LGBT laws.
The stamp showed a Ukrainian guard telling the Moskova to "go f**k itself." The post office didn't disclose where the attack came from, but we have an idea.
The social network's ranking change is meant to highlight original content, not compilations.
The two privacy-focused companies announced separate initiatives meant to undercut AMP, the tech giant's mobile page protocol.
The latest ruling in a high-profile case brought by LinkedIn case reaffirms that "hacking" and "scraping" aren't the same thing.
A new brand tagging feature lets your followers click through your posts and buy things, but you probably won't be seeing any of the cash.
U.S. advertisers have a growing appetite for the short-form video app and will likely spend more than $6 billion there, a new analysis predicted.
What was supposed to be a routine traffic stop quickly turned bizarre when the car sped away from police.
The attacks from Strontium are the latest in a string of exploits targeting Ukrainian and European officials.
The billionaire used his Miami Bitcoin 2022 keynote to rip several hundred-dollar bills as an opening bit and lambast the anti-crypto "gerontocracy" of finance.
Ukrainian Facebook users are facing myriad online threats right now, from networks of a fake journalists to false reports of abuse to outright hacks.
The company, which has never turned a profit, plans to trial new options to its app in the U.K. this summer and then move into hotel booking.
The crackdown is the country's latest attempt to quash dissent using its sweeping—and controversial—social media laws.
The group has previously hit companies like Shutterfly with vicious ransomware attacks.
The company announced it would be bumping up seller's "transaction fees" starting this April.
The California court's decision comes just over a month after the self-driving car giant sued the DMV over a public records request.