Despite lots of VC investment and buzz, AI "music" continues to be little more than a very expensive joke.
The Criterion Channel just launched a 24/7 curated service for its streaming app. Much fun.
The troubled airplane manufacturer has a new whistleblower and he comes bearing seriously frightening claims.
Security bugs in thousands of LG devices could allow hackers to hijack them.
The researchers said their new robot can synch its facial expression with yours. You know, to make it friendlier.
A new proposal for federal privacy legislation has bipartisan support but we've been here before.
The war in Gaza has spurred conflict and defection at the web's largest search engine company.
A private security firm that controls a huge amount of money was robbed over Easter weekend. Cops are stumped as to how it happened.
Silicon Valley's elite want to remake a California county in their own image. Do they really have a shot?
Meta's AI image generator has a hard time depicting an Asian man with a white woman.
Is the new Apple toy coming anytime soon? Probably not.
The electric vehicles startup has sold very few actual cars but has apparently spent over a million dollars on its top executive's air travel.
Uber and Waymo want to fully automate the food delivery industry.
The former President's media company is accusing the co-founders of the social media platform of bungling its business operations.
The legal case has caused drama for the ambitious project, which seeks to build a new city from scratch on thousands of acres of California farmland.
How exactly did a goofy joke video just beat out Mr. Beast?
After a ship slammed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge near Baltimore last week, the companies that own the vessel say they shouldn't be held liable.
One of California's more powerful legislators wants to create a more democratic ticketing market.
New litigation suggests prison phone companies have incentivized the elimination of in-person visits at prisons to spike their own profits.
The company is also being sued by investors who say it exaggerated what the devices could actually do.
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