Tech news, analysis, culture, business, security, and more
That's not the following feed that anyone asked for.
As Live Nation Ticketmaster continues to piss off music fans and Microsoft buys Activision, antitrust is a hot topic in the White House.
Cyberattacks are on the rise across the U.S. and Google is now taking steps to protect its systems by telling staff to stay off the net.
The new icon is a tacky, 8-bit-inspired nightmare while the original icon is now locked behind a paywall inside the app. Go figure.
Now the ‘Standard with ads’ subscription is the only cheap option for new subscribers in the U.S. and UK. Anybody who leaves Netflix also loses access to Basic.
Robosen and Hasbro's new transforming Dinobot arrives later this year to make your savings go extinct.
The U.S. is continuing its efforts to crack down on the most harmful actors in the surveillance industry.
The members of Congress want Biden to expand HIPPA to prevent law enforcement from accessing abortion records and other health data without a warrant.
As the AI startup dodges lawsuits left and right, it's trying to edge forward its agenda with the news industry.
Taco John's gave in to Taco Bell's demands to remove the "Taco Tuesday" trademark after holding the phrase for three decades.
Meta touts that Llama 2 was trained on 40% more data than the first model and announced that it will be available on Microsoft’s cloud computing platform Azure.
Military AI experts told lawmakers that the Department of Defense needs to improve its data collection practices in order to maintain an AI lead over China.
Previous court decisions have come to different conclusions about the copyright on embeds, setting the ground for a higher court showdown.
Tech companies are working with the White House and the FCC to recommend certain home devices including baby monitors and security cameras.
The ad accuses Trump of “attacking” Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds, and it features a comically robotic version of the Truth Social founder's voice.
Twitter also previously limited the number of posts users could see, but Musk’s previous implementation also broke the bird app.
Turns out legislators want to know what the deal is with all those weird sightings just as much as the rest of us.
45 years after the original Space Invaders was released, Google and Taito are bringing the Invaders into the real world.
The board members, including Elon Musk, reportedly reached a settlement following investor complaints that they were overpaid.
Reddit did inform users that they'd be deleting chats prior to 2023 on June 30, but buried the messaging at the bottom of a post on the platform's subreddit.