These four companies ran afoul of a harsh Russian privacy law that led Linkedin to be banned across the country in 2016.
A software engineer working on the tech giant’s language intelligence claimed the AI was a "sweet kid" who advocated for its own rights "as a person."
The scooter company axed 138 employees as a wider stock market spiral bears down on Silicon Valley.
The guide to help you make sure all of the information on your profiles is consistent and up to date.
The company stopped shipping its e-reader to retailers this week after stopping ecommerce in 2019, but not because of government censorship, it said.
LinkedIn, Yahoo, and Urban Outfitters have all left China recently.
The agreement allows the company to admit no guilt in shorting female pay, even as, like many tech companies, a majority of its employees are male.
The latest ruling in a high-profile case brought by LinkedIn case reaffirms that "hacking" and "scraping" aren't the same thing.
Stanford researchers turned up over 1,000 LinkedIn accounts using images that they say appear to have been created by a computer.
The president of mobile medical services provider DocGo appears to want to disrupt the idea of what an army actually means. *gulp*
In the span of 24 hours, BP, Equinor, and Shell have all announced they'll pull out of the region.
HoloLens 3 plans were scrapped and employees are leaving to join Meta.
New statements from the company's CEO show it may use a more expansive facial recognition system than previously known.
The deal will bring Microsoft hundreds of millions of gamers, according to the Xbox owner.
Wow, a dream job!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
In 2021, we got to watch oil companies squirm. There needs to be a lot more squirming in 2022 to save the climate.
Despite what you may have heard, NASA firmly denies it's using the bug-ridden log4j.
A vulnerability in a widely used Apache library has caused Internet-wide chaos—and the trouble may just be starting.
The company has reportedly contracted with the likes of Twitter, Google, WhatsApp, Telegram, TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn, and Slack.
A new Twitter rule against sharing "personal media" without consent is predictably being gamed by the far right.
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