In a new survey, Facebook, TikTok, and Instagram were found to be the least trusted tech companies.
YouTube and Disney failed to reach a new carriage deal before Friday's midnight deadline. YouTube TV will lose ESPN, National Geographic, and FX, among others.
Kids across the U.S. were supposedly encouraged to call in threats of school shootings and bombs for December 17.
Meta says it has banned six "surveillance-for-hire" firms from its platforms. The firms may have spied on tens of thousands of Instagram and Facebook users.
The bill suggests that if massive fines or bad PR won't scare tech CEOs, then maybe jail time might.
Researchers found thousands of cases where advertisers skirted the company's rules without ever being flagged.
Users will be able to just explain what's wrong rather than interpret Twitter's rules.
Trump Media and Technology Group has yet to launch a single product, but FINRA and the SEC are already interested.
An internal document outlines how the play time, comments, and likes, all come together to form your personalized feed.
The app is launching a test of "Split Payments," a feature that allows you to divide and pay for joint expenses.
A new Twitter rule against sharing "personal media" without consent is predictably being gamed by the far right.
A Reuters report claims the targeted officials were either based in Uganda or worked on matters related to that country.
In an incredibly simple four-year scam, prosecutors claim the men just said they held the copyrights and collected music royalties.
The law would have prohibited major social media platforms with more than 50 million users from removing users based on their political viewpoint.
If a site refuses to remove defamatory comments, the courts could compel companies to reveal the offending poster's personal information.
The suit aims to ban NSO Group from using any Apple software, hardware, or services, which would deal a direct blow to NSO's Pegasus software.
Researchers say that 'politely phrased' warnings can go a long way toward shaming people into better behavior.
Independent experts from NYU, UMass Amherst, Columbia, Marquette, and the ACLU are partnering with Gizmodo to responsibly publish this historic leak.
The AGs want to know if the company’s targeting of youth users could amount to a violation of consumer protection laws.
In a series of 21 lawsuits, TikTok was accused of improperly using and acquiring private biometric information.