A controversial new bill would make it illegal for internet service providers to let Texans read about abortion pills.
TikTok’s software development kits could undermine Joe Biden's order to stop internet traffic flowing from federal employees' phones to TikTok within 30 days.
A new lawsuit says the company doesn't staff enough therapists to meet demand and uses dark patterns to trick patients into costly recurring subscriptions.
Protect yourself from surveillance with clothes that block history's most invasive tech.
The hiring of a TV ad executive shows Apple is hard at work on showing you more ads in more places.
Microsoft is stopping conversations with Bing if a user asks about the AI's feelings. Wave goodbye to Bing's wacko alter ego.
A Mozilla study calls Google's app labels "a joke" and "useless," with loopholes so big you might be better off if you don't read them at all.
Ads on Google and Facebook targeted Haley supporters who attended a campaign event, saying she was backing Trump. She's not.
A new paper details how we might command robots using simple language. Sounds fun... until they start commanding themselves.
How we all secretly like the silencing we claim to hate.
Snapchat+ is doing great. Instagram and Facebook launched a pay-for-verification feature. Charging for blue checks drew scorn and ridicule, but cash is king.
If you get a new phone number, it's simple for someone else to take over your Whatsapp account and assume your identity, accidentally or on purpose.
The worst fears of school administrators are coming true, and let me be the first to say "lol."
In an interview about the future of AI, CEO Arvind Krishna says replacing white collar jobs is a win for the economy.
As Microsoft's newly released AI breaks into fever dreams, the chatbot's "hallucinations" include antisemitic remarks.
At a Senate hearing, victims and experts testified that the problems facing children on social media were too big for companies to handle.
Here's a preview of the Privacy Sandbox, the newfangled way companies will follow you around the web that's supposed to be better for your privacy.
A new study finds data brokers selling lists of people with anxiety, depression, PTSD, and more for as little as $0.20.
The Pentagon's list of phone contraband includes apps for dating, Chinese drones, VPNs, and multi-level marketing. Employees DGAF and download them anyway.
A look back at the cringiest tradition of the year—brands tweeting—that is sure to get you pumped to #spendmoney at the #grocerystore.