Amazon's $4.6 million bid was enough to win an ICANN auction.
The Snapdeal alliance could help Alibaba enter India’s booming online retail space and compete directly with Flipkart and Amazon.
Going public with Alibaba could potentially raise $25 billion, and maybe make it the biggest IPO in U.S. history. What's the real strategy?
Egypt, Indonesia and several other countries demanded Google user information for the first time in 2014.
Uber, California's hot taxi startup has expanded its Indian service, adding its low-cost UberX option in three Indian cities
High institutional demand ahead of an IPO later this week.
Use of ad blocking software has exploded among people of all ages, sexes and throughout the world.
"Our customers can use the Internet for anything they want," a Comcast spokesman said.
The video, posted by German tech site WinFuture, shows that Windows 9 will see the return of the Start menu, a popular feature that Microsoft removed from Windows 8 in favor of its Modern UI touch-centric interface.
Born out of Pop-Up Magazine events, it's high-gloss in print and an HBO model for content on the Web and mobile apps.
A British artist presumably pushed to have the Worcester News remove an article showing one of his older paintings.
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs' office is still on the fourth floor, just as he left it.
Cross-dressing performers are asking Facebook not to discriminate, but the real issue is money.
Privacy regulators examining 1,211 apps found that many don't explain why they gather so much personal information.
Google said the hack involving nearly 5 million accounts wasn't the company's fault.
Yahoo was ultimately forced to become one of the first companies ensnared in PRISM, the controversial surveillance program.
Advertisers like YouTube's growing stable of homegrown stars.
Net neutrality advocates nervous about Google's silence can relax.
Fijian peacekeeping troops who were posted in the Golan Heights had been captured two weeks ago by the Nusra Front.
A Viacom partnership will bring 22 channels to Sony boxes like the PS4.
For buying and selling illicit goods online, the shadowy Agora market picks up where Silk Road left off.
Gmail users are warned not to check if they're named in the database, but to change their password.
Senators Leahy and Pelosi have called on the FCC to ban the cleverly named "fast lanes."
Facebook, now among the world's most valuable companies, is in the midst of a mobile-advertising push.
Reddit made the rare move of shutting down a forum that earned the site bad publicity.
More than 50 lobbying groups have asked Google to cut its affiliation with ALEC.
Home Depot hasn't confirmed it's been hacked, but researchers think they've identified the suspects already.
While the Internet Slowdown hasn't attracted Google or Wikipedia, Reddit and various porn sites are involved.
The British aid worker, a captive of the Islamic State, was kidnapped in March 2013 in Syria near the Turkish border.
Passwords are one of the biggest threats to online security, but they remain a major staple of the Internet. Why?