'Truth about Tech': early Facebook, Google employees fighting what they built
Coalition of concerned experts, headed by former Google ethicist, plans an anti-tech-addiction lobbying effort and an ad campaign.
Coalition of concerned experts, headed by former Google ethicist, plans an anti-tech-addiction lobbying effort and an ad campaign.
Anyone remember Ping - Apple's "music-oriented social network," the hot new thing back in 2010?
The company has also disclosed thousands of accounts that it said were associated with a Kremlin-linked troll farm.
Macquarie Dictionary has named its word of the year for 2017, and it's sent plenty of people scrambling to the Google search bar.
Australia's top Google searches range from slime and sport, to cryptocurrency, covfefe and hurricanes.
With its access to two billion users, Facebook’s advertising algorithm can make or break companies. It can even drive you crazy – as the founders of one successful start-up discovered.
 International Women's Day, the Melbourne Cup and our nation's same-sex marriage decision were on the minds of Australian Facebook users in 2017, the social media site reports.
Jeremy Burge has unwittingly become the world authority on those smiling poos and cats with hearts for eyes.
Twitter's iconic 140 character limit for tweets is no more.
Site's fact-checking partners say process is too cumbersome and inefficient to stop misinformation duplicating and spreading.
What started as a tweet highlighting the differences between the tech giants' burger emojis has ended in a suggestion that the debate might start World War III.
Twitter will tighten rules on issues including hate speech amid a boycott over its handling of actress Rose McGowan's postings on predatory Hollywood boss Harvey Weinstein.
Employees had begun using the group as a 'hub for employees who backed Donald Trump's candidacy' and 'conservative political debate that sometimes degenerated into racist or sexist comments', reports say.
It started back in 1998 as an April Fool's Day gag, but it's become a beloved part of the worldwide web.
One of Mark Zuckerberg's top lieutenants was in Sydney this week to launch a charm offensive on local media executives amid a global backlash against Facebook and Google.
The original fact-checking site is asking for reader donations as it claims an advertising dispute has it 'in danger of closing its doors'.
A hoax message warning Facebook Messenger users not to accept friend requests from a "hacker" named Jayden K Smith has begun to circulate across the world, prompting confusion and an avalanche of memes.
The deep web and its inner recess, the dark web — those less well-trodden parts of the internet beyond the reach of Google and Bing — are not for the faint-hearted or untrained. With the right tools, however, there's little to fear and plenty to discover.
German regulators are asking whether Facebook takes advantage of its popularity to bully users into agreeing to T+C's they don't understand.
European antitrust regulators are set to impose a record fine on Google over its shopping service concluding one of three cases against the company.
In a coordinated campaign across 14 states, German police have raided the homes of 36 people accused of hateful postings over social media, including threats, coercion and incitement to racism.
Interactive experience two years in the making combines Street View exploration with audio storytelling and music from traditional owners.
Reports have zinged around the internet this week about a sudden and mysterious surge in President Donald Trump's Twitter following, along with dark musings that something nefarious may be afoot.
This week is notable for IPO anniversaries. Jeff Bezos took Amazon public 20 years ago. And five years ago Thursday, Facebook shares started trading for the first time.
Apparently I Will Always Love You was written for me. Thanks Dolly Parton.
This is the most glaring and under-appreciated fact of internet-age capitalism: We are, all of us, in inescapable thrall to the handful of American companies that now dominate much of the global economy.
A tweet from a teenager asking US fast food chain Wendy's for a year's supply of free chicken nuggets has become the most retweeted ever.
Apple has gone to space to find additional talent for its augmented reality efforts. The iPhone maker has hired Jeff Norris, a specialist in the new technology from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, to help build future products, according to people familiar with the matter.
With the rise of clickbait and fake news, the outrageous and controversial benefit at the expense of the sane.
A city with no cars on the street looms as a possible future for Singapore, according to its latest tech billionaire.
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