The proposed bill from NYC Councilman Christopher Marte would be the first to target apps like Getir and Gorillas for their ultrafast guarantees.
There's a slew of ad tracking tech on the New York Times-owned Wordle, a game once lauded for having none at all.
Sometime over the next two years, Google says it plans to make Android a more private piece of hardware. Color us skeptical.
Considering how the software's been used to target countless civic actors across the EU, the idea sounds pretty reasonable.
The EU's landmark privacy law, GDPR, was supposed to change the world of tech privacy forever. What the hell happened?
The new tool will be turned on, by default, for all Workspace customers starting March 29th. Here's how you can opt-out.
Diem was first rolled out as a concept in 2019 and has faced pushback ever since.
SXM Media is one of the players scrambling to come up with something to replace the long-hated cookie.
The host finally spoke up about his ongoing mishaps with Spotify over the weekend.
It's a tenth of the price of your average PCR test—and possibly just as accurate.
Sadly, this isn't the first time that the National Butterfly Center has been forced to take cover from QAnon followers—and it likely won't be the last.
It's a sure sign of more ads with more targeting coming across more screens—and that's not what anyone wants.
The planned replacement for third-party cookies was despised by nearly everyone (except Google), so the company has a new idea.
Nick Tran hadn't even been at TikTok for two years before being ushered out.
But there's no word on when we might be seeing the apes in the Facebook marketplace.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki warned that every website launch "comes with risk."
AT&T and Verizon had plans to deploy their “C-band” 5G tech starting on Wednesday.
The latest update in a multi-state suit targeting the search giant's advertising biz sure doesn't look great for Google and Facebook.
The app's famously been impenetrable to authorities in the past, and the DOJ isn't divulging how they could crack it this time.
The bill's authors say it's all about "returning power to consumers."