Advertisement
Supported by
Striking Amazon employees complained about how robots changed their jobs, but the company may help them think differently.
By Jamie Condliffe
Calls for outright bans on facial recognition are mounting. How likely are they to succeed?
Taking a principled stand against hackers can be expensive, but paying a ransom could lead to more trouble.
New legislation could tell you how much your data is worth. But you might be disappointed by the price tag.
The social network has ambitious plans to create a universal currency for the internet. Its reputation could get in the way.
The tech industry is caught in the middle of escalating trade tensions with China. And at home, regulators are getting serious about cracking down on Big Tech.
By Jim Kerstetter and Pui-Wing Tam
The legal action against Silicon Valley’s giants will be long, difficult, uncertain and, for some people, disappointing.
Almost everybody wants something done about disinformation. So why does it seem that nothing is changing?
When President Trump took his latest swipe at Huawei, he set in motion a chain of events that could affect your next smartphone.
San Francisco demonstrated that technologies believed to be damaging to citizens’ well-being can be curtailed.