-
A new book argues that the growing profitability of big business is bad news for workers.
-
Unable to compete successfully with Facebook and Google for digital advertising, Verizon signals a return to its roots as a telecommunications company.
-
By a 6-to-2 vote, the justices said Google's use of Oracle code did not infringe copyright laws.
-
Facebook objected to a proposed law that would force the social media giant and Google to pay publishers for news content.
-
TikTok will still undergo a national security review by federal officials, but any outright ban, or pressure to sell to an American company, will not be a priority of the Biden White House.
-
The move, which suspends the president's account for a week, comes after the video platform said a livestream of his remarks on Tuesday violated YouTube's community standards.
-
"Over the past several weeks, we've reported 98 examples to Parler of posts that clearly encourage and incite violence," Amazon Web Services said, according to court documents.
-
Amazon said it was removing Parler from its web hosting service, while Apple said it suspended the social media app from its store. Both companies said Parler allowed violent threats to go unchecked.
-
A bipartisan group of 38 attorneys general say Google abuses its power as the Internet's top search destination.
-
The videoconferencing app banned a Palestinian activist who is a member of a U.S.-designated terrorist group. Now, the company's policies are being questioned.