The app is designed to offer Facebook to users in countries with expensive or unreliable data networks.
It's not as hard as you might think.
The FBI has pressed for a new law that would force tech companies to give the bureau keys to their encryption technology.
Commuters stuck in traffic might soon notice that the car next to them doesn't have a driver.
Both companies have looked for a partner for years, and T-Mobile's CEO has said that the merger "makes some sense."
Coverage of the Yangtze ship disaster shows the government struggling to control the flow of information in the age of the Internet.
Nothing comes for free, Apple's CEO said, especially if it involves your personal information.
Judge Katherine Forrest told Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht she doubted he regretted operating the online drug market.
The government will no longer collect American phone metadata in bulk. But what is metadata, anyway?
Affordable smartphones are changing lives in India, helping people get jobs, allowing entrepreneurs to reach customers and creating new first-time users.
However, Fredrik Neij might not be done with the world's most famous torrent site.
The service outage hit areas across Puget Sound and may not be restored before midnight, the telecom giant said.
China has long banned online pornography. Weibo, often referred to as China's Twitter, is taking that further by also banning photos of models in swimsuits and lace.
With its pending $16 billion purchase of Altera, Intel fires a major shot in the battle over which chips will power large data centers.
To combat ever-more-inventive thieves and hackers, Chinese researchers have developed facial recognition-equipped ATMs.
The "hermit kingdom" lived up to its name when it came under attack in 2010.
The U.S. senator from Kentucky says he will not allow the passage of the USA Freedom Act, despite a plea by President Barack Obama.
An influential lawmaker in Moscow warned in February that authorities have on their radar dissident-friendly services such as Tor.
The story of a 31-year-old "digital kingpin," as prosecutors described him, is the subject of multiple book and movie projects.
In Project Soli, a tiny radar the size of a chip could some day let users control devices with nothing more than hand gestures.
Kim Dotcom's site was shut down in a high profile police raid in January 2012.
Apple and Google have publicly sparred with the U.S. law enforcement community on this issue.
The cyberattacks launched by North Korean hackers could have similar impacts as military attacks, a key defector said.
The FCC is seeking to make broadband access a right with an updated subsidy program. But it would make participants choose.
Internet giants Alibaba and Tencent square up in the country's new online banking sector, at the start of potentially far-reaching financial reforms.
The Facebook subsidiary announced on Tuesday that it has purchased Surreal Vision, a British company specializing in augmented reality.
If you need a way to transfer a huge files from one computer to another, Infinit's service is free and fast.
An investigation has found that details of sex scandals and alleged criminal acts were removed from MPs' Wikipedia pages from inside Parliament.
A Swedish court had awarded the file-sharing site’s domain names to the Swedish government, arguing that they could be classified as criminal tools.
Online access could change the lives of millions in India, but supporters of an independent Internet there say large companies are seeking to control it.