Tech news, analysis, culture, business, security, and more
Wasn’t the point of all these streaming services to avoid paying for cable?
An Amazon Go customer filed a class-action lawsuit against the company claiming it didn't inform patrons that they were obtaining their biometric data.
Previous leaks for Google’s upcoming mid-range version of the Pixel 7 say it's set to launch in June and cost somewhere around $500.
Current president of the Amazon-owned company, Dan Clancy, will be taking over as chief executive.
Remove everything from ex partners to buildings with a click or a tap.
A three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously decided that subtracting PTO as a punishment doesn't violate federal wage law.
Teams that enter the Vesuvius Challenge will get access to digital scans of two Herculaneum scrolls.
Microsoft is enabling an AI ‘copilot’ in all 365 apps, though it's reminding users they should really check the AI’s work.
The 20-pound cordless microwave can heat 11 cold meals or 20 drinks before it needs a fresh pair of batteries.
The company formerly known as Facebook is shifting its focus once again, this time to enter the artificial intelligence arms race.
A new app called Petey brings OpenAI's chatbot to your Apple Watch for voice-to-text conversations about birdhouses, among other things.
New FTX bankruptcy filings say Sam Bankman-Fried gave himself $2.2 billion, mostly from Alameda Research.
On Tuesday, a Russian Su-27 aircraft slammed into the propeller of a U.S. Air Force MQ-9 drone over the Black Sea.
The Lego Land Rover Defender 90 will be available starting April 1 for $240.
The Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. demanded that TikTok's Chinese owners divest their stakes in the company. TikTok pushed back.
In an excerpt from his book "Meganets," technologist David Auerbach parses how our "part-machine, part-human leviathans" make us feel the world has gone insane.
Elon Musks' EV company is being sued for alleged antitrust violations because the plaintiffs claim it's too difficult to repair a Tesla at an independent shop.
Why someone would pay for print copies of images freely available online remains a question for Midjourney magazine and for the media business writ large.
Duolingo, Microsoft, Slack, and New York City schools are all companies, brands, and places that are desperate ride the wave of the hyperrealistic chatbot.
Samsung responds to the controversy around the moon-capturing capabilities of its Galaxy S22/S23 Ultra cameras.