Those who already use the company’s services will lock in the same price of $8 until May 2016.
Walter White's empire will look and sound better than ever on Netflix.
Former Anonymous hacker Hector Monsegur (aka Sabu) has sentencing postponed again suggesting his FBI work continues.
Disrupt NY attendees didn't hear what the Yahoo CEO might do with the billions her company could get from the Alibaba IPO.
Al Franken says the FCC's proposed Internet rules are a dire threat to Net neutrality.
The Chinese e-commerce giant's marketplaces and platforms handled more transactions in 2013 than eBay and Amazon.com combined.
A middleman service asserts that ISPs are using their market share to make it hard for content providers to reach customers.
In the last nine months of 2013, the net income of e-commerce giant Alibaba increased 305 percent year-over-year.
Did Symantec just tell its customers that they’ve been paying for an obsolete product?
Most countries have made 3G the standard, with many already moving on to 4G, but Iraq’s government has not allowed the upgrades to the country’s cellular network.
A DOD unit is exploring the role of bitcoin and other virtual currencies in financing terrorism.
The company is allegedly monopolizing the internet and mobile search market - but has it really cornered the market?
New York plans to turn old payphones into giant touchscreen portals in what would be the largest municipal Wi-Fi system in the world.
For some, Bloomberg's bitcoin listing is the financial community's stamp of approval needed to view bitcoin as a worthy investment.
Nearly every event at F8, which is divided into categories of “build, grow and monetize,” is focused on mobile development.
With 488M XP users vulnerable to the IE bug and more cyberattacks, the pressure's on Microsoft to continue support or make it open-source.
Once the world's biggest bitcoin exchange, Mt. Gox will be liquidated after the company abandoned plans to revive its business.
The site may no longer see itself as competitive with Facebook and Twitter, but as a way to unify its varied products and services.
Facebook has launched “FB Newswire," a new feature aimed at making Facebook a better resource for journalists and newsrooms.
Not bad for a website up to its neck in legal issues.
The former CTO, Brendan Eich, was made CEO only to resign after 11 days due to a controversy surrounding his involvement in an anti-gay marriage bill.
The rules would allow Internet service providers like Comcast and Verizon to charge content providers for a “fast lane” to deliver large amounts of data to consumers.
The giant Internet retailer's broadening ambitions and improving margins likely boosted first-quarter earnings.
Huawei has been pursued by U.S. lawmakers who believe it has been engaged in espionage.
This time, the video giant’s $1 or $2 subscription fee hike for new users was cheered by investors and even some customers.
Preston-Werner said that a visit with the Oculus VR team convinced him of the potential of immersive computing and virtual reality, and he will now dedicate his time working on code in this new medium.
The company still has to negotiate its plans with each city, but AT&T said it hopes to start building the gigabit networks by the end of 2014.
The huge Chinese social media company's IPO came in a bit light but it's not likely a warning sign for Alibaba's big plans later this year.
Despite reports to the contrary, Google has no secret plans to bring Fiber to NYC.
Henrique de Castro was only Yahoo's chief operating officer for 15 months, but he has received a severance package worth nearly $58 million.