Many users all over the world were unable to access Alphabet Inc.’s calendar early Thursday, throwing off their daily schedules and creating a buzz on social media.
The internet company made the announcement across the major social networks. Unfortunately for Google, its own service wasn’t as well received.
Facebook in 2014 instituted restrictions on dating apps advertising on the social network. The latest shift once again limits their reach.
The hacker announced a new CEO through Brendan Iribe’s Twitter account, which was briefly compromised Wednesday.
For the first time, the social networking giant shared its five values to how it constructs the Facebook News Feed.
The ad features a Benghazi victim and bashes Hillary Clinton.
Slideshow is a new feature that allows users of Facebook’s iPhone app to create video compilations.
A new mobile app wants to answer an eternal question by grabbing live video from a host of different apps and sorting it by location.
The anonymous secret-sharing app takes a page from Snapchat and will host video for the first time as it courts advertisers.
People took to Twitter with complaints after having trouble accessing their online accounts following the Brexit vote.
When the cameras in the House chambers turned off, Rep. Scott Peters of California took to his smartphone to broadcast the protest.
After recent hacks, Mark Zuckerberg has joined the likes of whistleblower Edward Snowden and FBI Director James Comey in taping over his laptop camera and microphone.
More than 80 percent of Instagram users are located outside the United States.
“For our children and their children we should be facing the problems of the world together and not alone,” the former England soccer star said.
Bollywood superstar Salman Khan, who plays a wrestler in his next movie, said in an interview that he couldn’t walk straight after the shoot and felt like a “raped woman.”
Anonymous hacker Wauchula Ghost says he attacked Islamic State group supporters to urge Twitter to do more to prevent online radicalization.
Magic Pony Technology, a team of 14 engineers in London, will join the social media company to work on improving live video streams.
Real Life, an online magazine funded completely by the upstart social network, will launch June 27.
“How many people here know everything there is in the world?” Slack engineer Erica Baker asked at Wired Business Conference.
The social network wants to beautify and simplify your inbox — or at least your conversations within the company’s own network.
The purchase of the 11-year-old company could help Samsung drive innovations in its smartphone software, particularly around artificial intelligence and virtual reality.
The video subsidiary's content will now be available to share on websites, expanding from the Twitter timeline and Periscope app.