AI-enabled tech products have received a lot of bad reviews recently, and rightfully so, but that doesn't mean we've seen the last of them.
Because of an open source software component that never got a proper fix, some widely used computer products have security issues that are vulnerable.
Security bugs in thousands of LG devices could allow hackers to hijack them.
The new system is purportedly called "Presto." The company is said to begin rolling it out in its U.S. stores in April.
Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, aiming for a Moon landing next year, has established an ambitious schedule that could leapfrog Elon Musk’s SpaceX.
A complaint accuses Amazon of algorithmically steering users towards more expensive products with one-click shopping.
Kaspersky's team was tired of being hacked, then they uncovered backdoors in the hardware of Apple products.
Here are some of the highlights from this week AI news cycle.
A tech company has transformed the chatbot into a spying tool. Plus: WTF happened to Sam Altman?
Spanish company PLD Space made an important step forward—for itself and for Europe—by finally launching its Miura 1 rocket.
Northrop Grumman appears to have exited the race to build an ISS replacement, while Blue Origin is redirecting staff away from its Orbital Reef project.
The company's CEO Bob Smith is stepping down after a rocky six years at the helm.
The Air Force and the FAA denied permission for Varda Space's capsule to return and land on Earth.
Users received phantom payments from Google rewarding them for "dogfooding the Google pay remittance experience."
Signs suggest the megarocket could blast off as early as Monday, but SpaceX still needs an FAA launch license to make it happen.
In Ecuador, someone is trying to silence the news media by turning USB sticks into deadly weapons.
Rumors are swirling that United Launch Alliance is on the verge of being sold, in what would be a major shift in the aerospace industry.
The highly anticipated rocket will carry two internet satellites, a lunar lander, and the remains of dead U.S. presidents.
The LauncherOne rocket burned up in Earth's atmosphere, resulting in the destruction of all seven satellites on board.
A social platform that saw intense growth in a short period of time has now been forced to pull its servers offline due to a huge security bungle.