Sources say Israel worried granting Ukraine access to NSO's tool would be seen as an act of aggression.
After a hacker group claimed to have stolen the conglomerate's data, a company spokesman told Gizmodo that the info had actually been leaked by Nestlé itself.
Snap believes BCI can be used to enhance their future augmented reality experiences.
The Russian government banned Instagram and said Facebook's parent company was an "extremist organization," and a court upheld that designation.
Amazon closed its $8.45 billion deal with MGM Thursday, marking yet another major, multi-billion dollar acquisition during an era of supposed antitrust reform.
Russia banned Instagram after Meta allowed users' calls for violence against Russian soldiers and Vladimir Putin, so engineers made their own version: Rossgram.
The state attorneys general have no power to compel DirecTV to keep the pro-Trump network in its bundle of channels, but they "strongly recommend" that it does.
The House Judiciary's Antitrust Subcommittee wants the Justice Department to investigate the company for "potentially criminal conduct."
Groups users can now opt to automatically decline posts coming from sources Facebook fact-checkers have said contain false information.
A tech start-up providing a tool to remotely monitor ice cream sued McDonald's claiming it engaged in false advertising to disparage and defame their company.
Starlink’s sudden wartime internet infrastructure efforts have already faced challenges.
The move marks TikTok’s latest pivot away from the confines of short content after starting out with 15 seconds or less clips.
Meta's Nick Clegg claims Russia's regulator had demanded Facebook stop fact-checking state-run media sources during Russia's military invasion of Ukraine.
At least some law enforcement agents are reportedly considering the practice which legal experts say may violate U.S. law.
Workers interviewed by the Washington Post say their income hasn't kept up with inflation or the massive profits they generate for Apple.
Walking punchline Mike Lindell's pillow convoy hasn't reached Canada, but at least he's shouting about helicopters.
One of Meta's many new corporate values is "Meta, Metamates, me."
An investigation discovered at least five active honeypot sites claiming to offer exam answers while collecting visitor data.
The suit claims the company violated state laws by gathering and using facial recognition data on millions of users without their consent.
The retailer is forcing customers to spend $200 for a better chance at buying a GPU—and assisting scalpers in the process.