
Average US Remote Worker Saves 55 Minutes a Day
People working from home aren't just saving time commuting - they're also spending more time working.
People working from home aren't just saving time commuting - they're also spending more time working.
TikTok is cracking down on flexibility options, joining plenty of other tech companies that don't want remote workers.
Intel aims to slash $3 billion from its annual budget in this year, after revenues dipped by about 20% in 2022.
All three MailChimp breaches in the past 12 months have been due to social engineering or phishing.
Google's decision to fire 6% of its workforce has not gone down well with the employees left on the company payroll.
Microsoft wants every single one of its products to have some AI capabilities and is investing billions to make that happen.
According to recent reports, there are going to be layoffs made at Spotify this week. Here's what we know so far.
40 percent of young people use TikTok as a search engine, and the social media company encourages that use in a recent ad.
The move is another in a long line of tech layoffs that have kicked off in the new year.
The federal government has increased remote work options in recent years. One new bill might threaten that progress.
The program will wind down on February 20, 2023. Amazon cites a failure to "create the impact" that it had wanted.
Ransomware payments rose by hundreds of millions in 2020, but new data indicates they peaked in 2021.
The next two years are shaping up to be "the most challenging" for the company, CEO Satya Nadella recently admitted.
Amazon’s new delivery option “Prime Lite” is currently being trialed in India, but how does it differ from Prime?
Last week, over 3,000 staff were fired on the spot - the bank's biggest round of job cuts since the financial crisis of 2008.
A new study shows managers rate remote and flexi-time more highly than in 2020 - but are attitudes now starting to regress?
In a memo, interim CEO Howard Schultz cites a "need to rebuild" while the company "emerges" from the pandemic.
Cook asked for the pay cut himself, following shareholder criticism. Apple's stocks dipped by around 27% last year.
Microsoft is adding a semi-hidden downgrade to any users who aren't interested in paying for Premium: Fewer features.
The policy will go into effect on January 16th, and will be offered to all US salaried employees.
As Disney follows in the footsteps of Twitter and Uber, could bringing back workers create more harm than good?