Top executives told employees making LaMDA and other AI models public too quickly could damage the brand's reputation.
Alphabet, Inc. announced Waze employees will be merging with the Geo team at Google beginning on Friday.
Significant shareholder TCI Fund Management wrote a letter to Alphabet's CEO, requesting they make major staff cuts like other big tech companies.
Internal communications show employees joking about Incognito's abilities with one comparing it to "Guy Incognito" from The Simpsons.
To support his argument, Pichai referenced the days when Google was “small and scrappy.” He told employees not to equate fun with money.
At a conference and in a leaked meeting recording, Sundar Pichai reportedly referenced simplifying the company, and aiming for 20% more "efficiency."
The Alphabet Workers Union sent a petition to execs demanding they give contract workers abortion access benefits and stop sharing maternal user data.
A new report shows that major tech firms have made head-scratching investments into some blockchain companies, some of which are hurting after the recent crash.
The proposal would see Googlers complete a survey aimed at increasing efficiency and getting “better results faster.”
The company will cut roughly 1,000 workers this week, marking a sudden fall from grace for a company riding high on pandemic-fueled e-commerce growth.
From golden retrievers to tote-bag sized Shiba Inu's, here are some of Silicon Valley's top dogs.
Tech companies use political idiocy to their advantage while members of congress are often more concerned with soundbites than real regulation.
Ken Paxton, an election denier under indictment, says Google deceives Chrome users into believing Incognito offers more privacy. Surprisingly, experts agree.
A new report from the Tech Oversight Project shows how tech giants have shifted their priorities under the threat of antitrust action.
The company denied anticompetitive behavior and said states' complaints amount to little more than a "collection of grievances."
The legislation would make it illegal for tech’s largest internet companies to unfairly favor their own products and services on their platforms.
The latest update in a multi-state suit targeting the search giant's advertising biz sure doesn't look great for Google and Facebook.
The suit cites "clandestine meetings" between each company's CEO as proof for the claim.
In a new survey, Facebook, TikTok, and Instagram were found to be the least trusted tech companies.
The company will wait until 2022 to determine when its U.S. workers can safely return to the office in the long-term.