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The company intends to slather users’ feeds with recommendations of posts outside of who they follow, and it will be all the worse for it.
Those little addictive videos are growing in popularity, for some reason?
After years of scandals left NSO Group broke and on a U.S. blacklist, L3Harris Technologies expressed interest, and the White House expressed concern.
It promises images up to 80 inches in size, but you'll probably want the curtains closed.
The new beta product lets PC users change their voice in real time, which may be a boon for not only streamers, but for the trans community as well.
The company attempting to be the next Apple will officially unveil its first smartphone on July 12.
Adobe's latest neural filter promises to make photo restorations easy for even amateur pixel pushers.
Bitcoin recently dipped 7.8% to $20,289 due in part to the sudden freezing of withdraws from vendors like Celsius.
The once-dominant browser is gone forever. RIP, IE.
The former Microsoft mogul lambasted Bored Apes and the entire basis of cryptocurrency at a conference.
The billionaire says there will be a 'massive red wave' in November. Ron DeSantis responded: "I welcome support from the African-American community."
The new rules are based on old promises the tech companies made to Europe’s regulators, although recent events show it wasn’t nearly enough.
Harry Styles, Lizzo, Kate Bush, and Louis Theroux are responsible for some of TikTok's catchiest hooks.
New concerns about Ring's audio recording practices are breathing new life into a yearslong inquiry.
Hackers love the healthcare industry, though the feeling isn't mutual.
The court said a confusing, poorly written ballot proposal attempting to classify drivers as independent contractors was unconstitutional.
Though there are limitations to the new features that might make them not-so-useful depending on where you go, or if you're traveling with friends.
New research uses a smartphone's camera to create a 3D model instead of expensive special effects gear.
Apple's tracking crackdown wasn't only about protecting users—it was about beefing up its own business, German authorities say.
The audio company blamed recent updates to its system and promised customers full refunds.