The company is making changes to a popular message board called Memegen that some employees say sounds a lot like censorship. By Nico Grant Nico Grant reports on Google from San Francisco.
Google agreed to destroy billions of data records to settle a lawsuit claiming it secretly tracked the internet use of people who thought they were browsing privately. Terms of the settlement were ...
Police are removing anti-Israel protesters from Yale’s campus early Monday after a week of demonstrations calling for the ...
Google Podcasts service ceases on 2 April in U.S. Google's Podcasts app has been downloaded over 500 million times, but only 4% of U.S. podcast listeners use the platform. As of April 2, the ...
Ahead of its Google I/O developer conference, the internet giant announces a bunch of free AI upgrades to its Google Photos. Ian Sherr Contributor and Former Editor at Large / News Ian Sherr (he ...
Microsoft now bundles its Office products in the Microsoft 365 subscription. The Microsoft 365 Personal bundle comes with access to all Office programs, plus 1TB storage space in OneDrive.
If you’ve ever posted something to the internet—a pithy tweet, a 2009 blog post, a scornful review, or a selfie on Instagram—it has most likely been slurped up and used to help train the ...
Columbia protestors agree to dismantle some tents. Gaza war protest encampments spread across U.S. universities. Columbia ...
Google said it would delete millions of records of users’ browsing activities as part of a settlement of a class-action lawsuit that alleged it tracked people without their knowledge. The case ...
Google is making its AI photo editing features available to a lot more people. Starting May 15th, just about all Google Photos users will be able to access features previously limited to Pixel ...