Sen. Ron Wyden said shady data practices put the 'lives and essential rights of women' at risk.
The mud glyphs are over 1,000 years old and include humanoid figures, abstract shapes, and an 11-foot-long serpent.
The future Twitter owner cast doubt on psychiatric medications over the weekend. Doctors and patients alike told him to shove it.
More than 25 organization called on Twitters top advertisers to uphold three non-negotiable standards of community trust and safety.
George R.R. Martin doesn't owe anybody anything, but it would be polite if he'd stop trolling us.
'Circle' allows users to make select, individual tweets 'private', as opposed to a whole account. It's currently being tested among a subset of Tweeters.
Plus, speculation on a new folding Pixel smartphone.
As Multiverse of Madness brings Doctor Strange back to a title role, the actor reflects on his status as the MCU's go-to supporting man.
There is a wealth of information on the internet, but not all of it is equally legitimate or scientifically accurate. Here are some of the good websites.
The end of Roe v. Wade will not mean the end of abortion in America, but it will mean more unsafe and life-threatening abortions.
The public health agency was planning on using the data for Covid and non-Covid related purposes.
Deep Pink joins an ultra-exclusive (UK-only) tartan-coated controller.
And Viola Davis may return to the role for the HBO Max series.
Google's inaugural budget smartphone will see its last software update in July 2022.
The new digital world is a part of Spotify's plan for entering the metaverse... whatever that means.
An Apple patent shows the tablet maker potentially taking lessons from the Microsoft Surface Pro.
The climber yammered to his followers about baby-murdering abortion providers in Washington while hundreds of feet in the air Tuesday morning.
The latest preview shows a kids' film full of winks to the parents who've been dragged to the theater.
The pilots managed to capture the falling first stage but chose to release it after noticing funky "load characteristics."
Here's a look at just a few of the first 1,000 previously confidential pages Gizmodo published this month.