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Abortion pill websites are selling consumer data to outside third parties, according to new reports.
More than 150 million money transfer records are reportedly accessible, without a warrant, by more than 600 law enforcement agencies.
If you still have the Bluetooth controller, you can unlock it for use with other devices.
CoinDesk is reportedly thinking about selling its site after the debacle involving Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX, which was first reported by CoinDesk.
The GuliKit hall effect joystick upgrade kit should solve your Switch drifting woes once and for all
Smores is a new app that curates a music feed using a TikTok-meets-Tinder-like feed using your Spotify account.
Although malware attacks aren't necessarily declining, cybercriminals' profits are, new analysis says.
Meta's not backing down on its ambitious plans to integrate its so-called metaverse into our everyday lives.
Fans of the Nintendo DS' virtual pup game are hoping it makes a return with some AR upgrades.
A machine learning-based AI called Nexto is so supremely good at Rocket League even top tier players are having trouble in online matches.
The statue was the highest-grossing product at the auction. A 10-foot neon blue bird sign went for $40,000, while an "@" sculpture planter went for $15,500.
AmazonSmile, which launched in 2013, made donations to charity when users shopped using its subdomain.
Apple says it's for automation. But it could also be used for spatial audio.
The U.S. State Department is changing the decades-old tradition of using the Times New Roman font for internal documents.
The Wikimedia Foundation is touting new features like an improved search, a collapsible side menu, and a header that scrolls with you.
While Musk’s fateful tweets included “technical wordsmith inaccuracies," Musk’s lawyer claims the CEO really did intend to take the company private. Somehow.
The Commerce Department is inviting comments on how the problems of data harvesting worsen structural inequality.
Amazon is pushing back against a citation issued for safety hazards reportedly found in three of its facilities.
The Trump campaign called on Meta to promptly overturn Trump's suspension which it claimed, "dramatically distorted and inhibited the public discourse."
The social media platform cut access from third-party apps like Tweetbot and Twitterific earlier this month with no real explanation.