Yahoo to give Marissa Mayer $23 million parting gift after sale to Verizon
Mayer will leave as what remains of Yahoo becomes Altaba holding company.
Mayer will leave as what remains of Yahoo becomes Altaba holding company.
You need AT&T postpaid to get "unlimited" data without speed limits.
Senator: Social media sites aren’t bad or good—ceding them to hate is the problem.
Whether it involved trucks, buildings, or banquettes, AR/MR headset has made life easier.
“Digital redlining” leaves poor people with the slowest Internet, report says.
You could pay $87 more per year to watch the same teams as nearby customers.
C'mon now.
With net neutrality worries gone, FiOS TV goes "data-free" on Verizon Wireless.
Confidential messenger service provides no authentication or integrity assurances.
Exploits for easy-to-spot bug are trivial, reliable, and publicly available.
The CIA's malware development team dug deep into geek culture.
WikiLeaks dump includes a best (and worst) practices guide for exploit developers.
An inevitability is becoming a reality.
Firefox 52 also includes support for WebAssembly.
CIA hackers wasted no time analyzing the blunders made by their NSA counterparts.
25Mbps up and 25Mbps down for $60 per month, including the router.
Visual Studio for Mac is also getting a new preview.
Two-socket server chip coming in second quarter.
Meaner strain of Shamoon makes comeback, joined by new, never-before disk wiper.
W3C's decision to publish a DRM framework will keep the Web relevant and useful.
The good news is that it doesn't have to suck, if you build it out properly.
Small downloads are a big win for Insider Preview users.
The goal is to block robocalls from numbers that can't possibly be valid.
Post-mortem: Servers removed by accident, and restart took longer than expected.
Delivered by "secure" Word doc, pure PowerShell malware fetches commands from DNS TXT records.
Nation-sponsored attackers targeted 26 specific accounts.
It'll be easier to stop Windows from rebooting in the middle of something important.
Plenty of customers still have data caps, and FCC won't halt zero-rating.
Researchers suspect developers didn't intentionally spawn the malicious apps.
Researchers slip past Jigsaw's Perspective API with strategic punctuation.