The online collaboration service will now support opening and editing Office files within Yammer.
The photo-sharing app experienced technical issues Thursday afternoon.
The social network introduces GIF and sticker searching in latest update to Facebook Messenger.
The social network has expanded shopping within Pages by adding "Buy" buttons and checkout options.
The ride-sharing service provider welcomed the regulations, but they were condemned by local labor groups.
A consortium could buy eBay's enterprise unit for about $900 million, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Drivers for the rideshare company Sidecar are suing Yelp for failing to get them tips they say they deserve.
The video-messaging service allowed users in Mecca to showcase the Muslim holy city during Ramadan.
Jodi Magi was arrested last month for posting a picture of an illegally parked car in front of her apartment building.
A report on a fake news site called bloomberg.market caused Twitter Inc.'s stock to jump Tuesday.
"Story Star" helps find celebrities and other artists who have become famous on the disappearing messaging app.
Mozilla's browser will block all versions of Flash by default until an updated version is released with fixes for several security flaws.
The app Mobcrush is now out of private beta testing.
The images are the result of a nine year, $3 billion trip to Pluto.
Kylie Jenner and Tyga stepped out in public Sunday night for the first time since the Mia Isabella scandal broke.
“Warning: Trespassers in my direct messages will be shot and hung out to dry in public," porn star Mia Khalifa wrote Sunday.
The update puts Discover and Live Stories content, areas where advertisers can pay, on the messaging app.
Google and Facebook provide search and check-in features, so why do we even need Foursquare anymore? Here are some pro tips.
Sketchy ads likely triggered a warning from Google's SafeBrowsing, though RARBG and ExtraTorrent are back to normal.
The ads, which consisted of looping, rapid succession of bright colors, were criticized for being "massively dangerous."
"Scott Walker is in. Are you?" read Walker's tweet. It was published Friday and quickly hidden.
Facebook's new tools let users decide which of their friends and pages' posts they'll see first on their News Feeds.