Apple is far from the only company apparently monitoring badge swipes to keep its staff from working in the comforts of home.
As Congress pushed around TikTok CEO Shou Chew, one representative played a video that threatened the committee, and Chew tacitly said the app sells user data.
Lonely? Bored? Need to know something? Have no fear. Every company and their mother suddenly has an "AI chatbot" to help you with that.
The S23+ is also great if you want a bigger phone, though it's less powerful than the Ultra.
If, for some reason, you've been using Microsoft's Snipping Tool to crop your most precious digital secrets, bad news: it has a bug.
Apparently, not even job search platforms are immune in the latest spate of layoffs resulting from a months long tech downturn.
A new bill would charge Google and Facebook fees when advertising is sold alongside local news articles appearing on a tech platform.
Nothing's next product, the $149 Ear (2) wireless earbuds, are an update to its very first.
The probable presidential candidate said Big Tech was worse than Gilded Age monopolies, a surprising echo of the Justice Department's top antitrust enforcers.
As the AI war in Silicon Valley heats up, the world's biggest search engine is starting a beta test of its own large language model chatbot.
Bing and Edge users can use chat features to have the AI image creator spit out images based on written text.
Apple has also paused hiring and transfers, but major releases like MacBooks and iPhones seem unaffected.
This recent round of layoffs will affect departments like Amazon Web Services, human resources, advertising, and Twitch live streaming.
"I'M BACK!," the former president posted along with a 2016 campaign clip.
Apple Maps silently added Boston to its total of 17 cities that show off various landmarks with 3D models.
In January Google announced plans to layoff 12,000 employees—and many Googlers aren't happy with how those cuts are being handled.
YouTube is reinstating Donald Trump's channel, making it the last of the major U.S. social media companies to reverse course after Jan. 6.
The Android smartphone starts at $450 and boasts a Super AMOLED screen with up to 1000 nits brightness.
The about face on Matter smart home interconnectivity means there could be some issues trying to get Wemo smart plugs working with other brands.
A letter from Parents Together Action castigates social media companies after documents showed execs, including Mark Zuckerberg, were informed of harms to kids.