Steven Donziger was found guilty, but the court's obvious biases could strengthen his appeal.
Imagine getting your paycheck, buying groceries, and paying your rent, all using fake money called PrimeCoin or something.
The CW show also hinted at what's to come in season 7, including Matt Ryan's return as a brand-new character.
Bezos was surprised and told the teen it had been a while since he heard someone say that.
Rosamund Pike stars in this adaptation of Robert Jordan’s novels, which is already filming season 2.
State labor departments claim that they're using face recognition identity verification to prevent fraud, but you might want to check out the privacy policy.
Writer-director Wyatt Rockefeller's debut feature follows a group of people clinging to life on Mars.
Researchers paint a grim picture of a corporate mind-melding future via brain-computer interface technology that's as addictive as opioids.
A large domain name system failure appears to have knocked major websites offline.
Along with cheaper price tags, the Z Flip3 and Z Fold may also get official IP ratings too.
The In the Heights breakout is trading New York for Gotham.
Violent extremists aim to use DLive for “recruitment and propaganda distribution," analysts warned.
The 2008 movie predicted a future where corporations destroy Earth and billionaires shuttle humanity to space. In real life, we can't continue down that road.
Though Orlando Jones' American Gods performance was a series standout, the actor won't reprise his Anansi role.
The morning broadcast TV news cares more about a billionaire's few minutes in space than the fate of the planet.
Bezos thanked you, the Amazon customer (and taxpayer), for funding his rocket ride. And Rep. Earl Blumenauer proposed a space tax for joyrides.
The company says that workers are now on their own if they want to be tested for the coronavirus.
Turns out even billionaires can feel the overview effect. They just come to slightly different conclusions than astronauts.
Haute couture tech is a scam and you should not buy into it.
A new report tracks just how much shipping-related emissions retailers like Walmart, Ikea, Amazon, and Target are responsible for.