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A buyer made a nearly $600,000 offer on the house—double its asking price, and will open it up for Halloween if renovations are finished on time.
Talulah Riley and Musk were married to each other twice and divorced twice.
One America News had been dropped by both Verizon and DirecTV, but now it has plans to stream its bile through cord cutter’s old devices.
The agency has threatened to block seven companies' calls if they don't mitigate robocalls within two weeks, in compliance with mandatory STIR/SHAKEN standards.
If you're looking for love, try talking to someone on Bumble for three minutes before you see what they look like.
The data dump reportedly includes sensitive identifying information like social security numbers, as well as passport, and tax form details.
The company will showcase the new Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro, plus the much-rumored Pixel Watch.
Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and more all depend on being shielded from responsibility for user content via Section 230, but that could soon change.
Despite previous reports, Bruce Willis' representatives say the actor has not sold his likeness for deepfakes.
An April Fools' Day prank from a few years ago continues to spiral out of control.
The tech giant has struggled for close to two decades to meet the demands of China's censorship policies.
The billionaire promoted something called EthereumMax, which turned out to be worthless.
The company that once partnered with Boeing and the now-defunct Kittyhawk now has to compete with other four-seat designs from the likes of Joby.
For all the non-Spanish speakers out there, "bussi" is a combo of the words "bus" and "sí," and no, the mascot did not appreciate your joke.
Google's public search liaison explained in a Q&A how the company attempted to balance users' desire for privacy against providing information to the public.
Elon Musk has finally unveiled his "humanoid" robot and it's, uh...definitely a work in progress.
Two dozen civil rights groups urged Congress to pass transparency rules around military purchases of private data.
Keep distractions at bay with Android and iOS's built-in notification snoozing capabilities.
Unless they're cleaning floors, robots have always been a hard sell to consumers.
Amazon keeps trying to put a cute face on its surveillance tech.