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Amidst ongoing accusations that Spotify is allowing Joe Rogan to spread covid-19 misinformation on his podcast, the platform has removed dozens of episodes.
One of the men most responsible for altering the course of global power in the 20th century has some thoughts on how the next hundred years will play out.
Facebook had its worst day ever on Thursday and the former president has some theories on what went wrong.
The right-wing Twitter alternative is apparently having big financial problems. The solution? Layoff its entire IT staff.
The EU's landmark privacy law, GDPR, was supposed to change the world of tech privacy forever. What the hell happened?
With a few exceptions, all adults who refuse to comply could face fines up to $4,000.
Your home's toilet paper usage might drop when everyone sees how much they're actually using.
Snap earned a profit for the first time in its history. Meanwhile, Mark Zuckerberg lost $31 billion as Meta's stock price plummeted.
After ongoing scandals involving shady malware vendor NSO Group, it turns out that a rival firm has also been targeting iPhones with its own exploits.
Amazon's Prime membership cost is going up by $20. Interesting timing.
The shady face recognition firm is now landing contracts with the military and keeping details quiet.
Another crypto hack is at hand and, once again, hundreds of millions of dollars have been disappeared in a cloud of virtual smoke.
New leaks indicate that Android users could've had it all.
HoloLens 3 plans were scrapped and employees are leaving to join Meta.
Facebook reported a quarterly decline in daily active users for the first time in nearly 18-years, prompting a historic market wipeout.
Serious privacy concerns continue for one of Apple's most controversial products.
The Moto G Stylus is one of the cheapest ways to get a phablet with a stylus if you don't mind the lack of 5G.
Reports of the sudden surge in unexpected braking from Tesla owners come just days after a recall involving Teslas rolling through stop signs.
A new report claims that an "independent hacker" took down North Korea's internet because he was mad that the country's government had targeted him.
Because what could possibly be more hip than asking the American Enterprise Institute how to build your hot new tech product?