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France Fines Apple $27 Million for Slowing Old iPhones
Apple throttled the performance of phones with old batteries. France fined it $27 million.
Apple throttled the performance of phones with old batteries. France fined it $27 million.
Apple's wearables division earned an "all-time record" in Apple's best quarter yet. Where is the success coming from?
This weekend, Amazon employees put their jobs at risk to protest climate change, and it's not the first time this month.
Everyone's favorite dating app is helping keep its users safer than before: Tinder just announced a slate of safety features.
A transcription program Microsoft used to vet Skype and Cortana audio allegedly operated for years with no security measures.
We take a look at the top products, including a previously-banned toy, smart bath mat and more.
At CES 2020, robots are flashy innovations designed to stir up interest. Here's a closer look at the best.
CES 2020 kicked off today. Lenovo debuted new laptops, Chromebooks, and the world’s first 5G PC. We take a look at the range
Here, we'll offer a quick overview of how you can start your own podcast for free (or at least, as cheaply as possible).
Glassdoor's long-running "Best Places to Work" list has just debuted for 2020, with a few shocks for big tech companies.
The ELD deadline is fast approaching, but not all businesses have upgraded their commercial vehicle technology...
From Elon Musk's not-so-unbreakable Cybertruck windows, to Facebook's unwelcome Dating service, we run through the big tech launches of 2019 that failed to wow, or were just plain embarrassing.
A 32,000 strong Facebook group has officially moved to a paid app, and now charges a membership fee of $5 a month.
Samsung just revealed its next-gen Galaxy Fold design, which comes with one huge change: It will fold horizontally rather than from side to side. Is Samsung flailing after their past troubles with foldable phones, or does this design make sense?
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey just announced that Twitter will stop running all political ads. The rule will go into effect globally on November 21. Is it good, bad, or a little of both? Here's our rundown on what the news means.
The private information of almost 7.5 million Adobe Creative Cloud users has been exposed in a new security breach. The exposed data didn't include any passwords or financial details, but did include email addresses.
Apple's AirPods Pro will be noise-cancelling and water-resistant. They'll cost $249 for a pair, and will be on sale this Wednesday, Oct 30. Here are the specs to know.
Google's just-revealed Pixel 4 and 4 XL phones won't let users upload an unlimited amount of original quality photos to their account for free. But thanks to a quirk of fate, iPhone users currently still can. Google has termed this iPhone ability a "bug" and vowed to fix it.
Facebook has closed a deal with the Washington Post that will let it populate its soon-to-be-launched news section with headlines from the major media outlet. Other publications in the news section include Business Insider, Buzzfeed News and News Corp media properties.
Twitter aims to restrict its users from liking, replying to, or retweeting any tweets from world leaders that are found to break Twitter's rules. Find our more about Twitter's slow-moving fight to clean up its platform.
Mastercard and Visa officially pulled their involvement with Facebook's Libra currency over the weekend, along with eBay and online payment platforms Mercado Pago and Stripe. Paypal already left a week prior. Plus, a new G7 report warns against digital currencies.