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Facebook introduces a confusing new setting as the walls close in on Zuckerberg’s data machine.
Nearly half of SBF’s 13 criminal charges have been dropped, and it seems he’ll only ever be tried for seven of them.
You might be owed a bit of money if you bought a Vizio TV in 2014 claiming a 120Hz or 240Hz ‘Effective Refresh Rate.’
If you don't know the language, your phone can help with that.
Investors marked down the value of X in November, the same month advertisers fled Elon Musk’s free speech platform due to antisemitic content.
Catch up on the biggest tech stories from this week.
The bike sharing program promised more ebikes and stations are coming, but Citi Bike prices have increased well over 100% in the past decade.
Jensen Huang was everywhere this year, and he's using his leverage to make Nvidia the next Intel.
Google murdered a whole lot of products in 2023, but Apple, Amazon, and even Netflix have blood on their hands.
Kaspersky's team was tired of being hacked, then they uncovered backdoors in the hardware of Apple products.
You should be able to buy an Apple Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 at more Apple stores over the next two days, and online by Thursday afternoon.
The Times is suing OpenAI and Microsoft for training AI models on the newspaper’s work, claiming “billions of dollars in statutory and actual damages.”
The most brain-dead examples of AI nonsense from an already stupid year.
From the Apple III to AirPower, botched product releases prove Apple isn't as immune to failure as some might think.
Every AI startup has a weird governance structure that “benefits society,” but nobody wants to talk about it benefitting their wallet.
China's BYD now has the top spot in the electric car business as Tesla's bad year gets worse.
Rebel Moon - Part One: A Child of Fire topped the streamer's English-language film watchlist after its debut December 22.
Chinese social media Weibo is suffused in accusations ‘Xiangqi King’ Yan Chenglong cheated with vibrating anal beads, then defecated in a bathtub.
Jony Ive and Sam Altman are reportedly scooping up Apple’s best talent to build the next great hardware device, and it will run on OpenAI’s software.
National Amusements isn’t saying much about the tens of thousands of customers who potentially lost their information to hackers, or about the breach itself.