The original Luddites were not anti-technology. Their argument was with how wealthy industrialists were robbing them of their way of life.
Are digital addictions really comparable to substance use disorders? Here's what the latest neuroscience suggests.
Users received phantom payments from Google rewarding them for "dogfooding the Google pay remittance experience."
Following Elon Musk’s accusations that Twitter artificially inflated its metrics, Jack’s other company is in the spotlight.
New data shows the U.S. recently lost 18,500 ATMs, and while tap-to-pay options are spiking, the banking industry says ATM crime is also part of the decline.
More than 150 million money transfer records are reportedly accessible, without a warrant, by more than 600 law enforcement agencies.
The agency cited timeline concerns, and announced it would push back implementation of new tax requirements for businesses that rely on digital payments.
A tax code change introduced this year may result in cash app users filing additional taxes in 2023.
The e-commerce giant will accept Venmo for payments on its website and mobile app ahead of the Black Friday shopping rush.
One victim mailed stacks of cash totaling $45,000 to different addresses across the country, according to documents obtained by Gizmodo via FOIA.
Nearly two dozen complaints filed with the FTC reveal a cottage industry of scam websites posing as Canon's to dupe frustrated owners.
For all the people who made millions made on Gamestop, plenty of Robinhood users slammed the company in FTC complaints obtained by Gizmodo via FOIA.
Fintech company Plaid is paying out a $58 million settlement to customers of 5,000 apps that used its interface to connect the apps to their bank accounts.
Bitcoin's blockchain appears to be the newest tool that cybercriminals are using to make their botnets incredibly resilient.
Amazon claims to know the cause of the problem and is working on a solution.
Privacy experts worry the patent could normalize Clearview’s controversial data scraping practices in lieu of meaningful legal constraints.
The app is launching a test of "Split Payments," a feature that allows you to divide and pay for joint expenses.
It's not just the Sierra Club or Natural Resources Defense Council that need your cash.
Another hazy dispatch isn't reassuring. More details to come, they say.
Tumblr? Tumblr... I haven't heard that name in years.