The interrogation over Shou Chew's country of origin was just one of the awkward moments from today's hearing.
A complaint filed to Washington’s AG alleges Starbucks’s mobile app uses “dark patterns” to trick users into spending more money on beverages.
Users in certain US states can no longer access Pornhub, as the platform refuses to tolerate new laws around age restrictions.
The company claims the FTC is trying to change the terms of a $5 billion 2020 privacy settlement.
Car manufacturers will be required to give independent mechanics access to the same diagnostic software and parts they give to authorized repair shops.
Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle said they would only reauthorize FISA Section 702 if the feds agree to new warrant requirements.
Prominent Republican lawmakers jumped on shoddy analyses appearing to show overwhelming pro-Palestinian bias on TikTok. The truth is more complicated.
New documents in the Google antitrust trial show how tension between product and advertising teams could lead to degraded experiences for consumers.
A House committee introduced a bill regarding the consumer drones due to national security concerns from Chinese tech.
The first-of-its-kind order calls on tech companies to develop tools to ensure their AI systems are safe, trustworthy, and protect against unintentional bias.
The Oversight Board called on Meta to revise its policies to make it more difficult for creators to earn money from videos that describe dangerous dieting.
The Oversight Board called on Meta to audit potentially "inconsistently enforced" drug policies and clarify what it considers a “supervised medical setting.”
Experts say the state's top court missed an opportunity to rein in the practice, which critics have attacked as an extreme digital dragnet.
Supporters of the bill say it's necessary to thwart convicted felons who use 3D printers to develop untraceable "ghost guns."
Small amounts of NVIDIA chips can still be purchased in China, but a new rule looks to close the roundabout ways American chips get there.
A federal judge deciding the fate of the ban questioned why the state should prevent users from willfully sharing their data with TikTok.
The law goes beyond previous right-to-repair legislation by forcing manufacturers to provide repair resources for devices up to seven years after they are sold.
The suit singles out TikTok, alleging its endless scroll and "For You" recommendation algorithm hook young users and leave them "unable to escape."
Top tech and business leaders begged generative AI companies to pause new developments for six months. AI companies clearly didn't listen.
Both GOP-led states have tried to restrict platforms from moderating posts or banning accounts.