At Apple, all senior executives are male. Why? And why so few female CEOs?
Tropical Storm Irene left Vermont with severe flooding. In response, residents took to Facebook to help in the recovery.
China's Communist Party control is at risk unless the government takes firmer steps to stop Internet opinion being shaped by increasingly organized political foes, a team of party writers warned in a commentary published on Friday.
This little girl shocked audience on the U.S. reality show Toddlers and Tiaras with fake C cup breasts and padding on her bottom.
What do Lady Gaga, Jay-Z, Justin Timberlake and Ashton Kutcher have in common with Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Page and Sergey Brin? Well, they are the innovative visionaries, according to Vanity Fair's New Establishment list.
Authorities are searching for Jacob Rigby, who went missing on Sunday.
Israel's social protest movement faces its moment of truth on Saturday when the turnout for a March of a Million demonstration in Tel Aviv will show whether a popular push for reform can be sustained, a leading organiser said.
Girls' T-shirt with an allegedly sexist and offensive statement I'm too pretty to do homework so my brother has to do it for me has been pulled from the website of its sellers J.C. Penney, after it sparked controversy among parents.
Social networking giant Facebook is now re-developing the Web site to make it more music-friendly.
Los Angeles-based artist, Cain Motter, like many others, has tried to share his opinion about the impact of using credit cards on the modern society.
While snagging a deal is not a new concept, it seems lately that daily deal discount Web sites like Groupon dominate the Internet. Here is your guide for the top 12 best daily deal, Groupon alternative, Web sites.
A leading venture capital star says that a changing set of valuation expectations could be the prick that pops the software industry bubble.
Texas juror Jonathan Hudson has plead guilty to contempt of court after trying to befriend the defendant of the case, Courtney Downing.
AT&T has apparently figured out the key to lawmaker hearts: U.S. jobs. The telecommunications company has committed to bringing 5,000 jobs back to the United States once its proposed merger with T-Mobile USA is approved and finalized. AT&T says the jobs will be in wireless call centers, and will bring back positions that were previously outsourced abroad.
The leader of the Liberals, a party reduced to also-ran status in the May federal election, on Tuesday rebuffed the idea of an alliance with their left-of-center rivals, even as a former party leader touted a merger as the only way the left would win back power.
Russian internet investment group Mail.ru raised its full-year revenue growth forecast to 50 percent from 40 percent on Wednesday after sales and profit rose at its social network, online gaming and e-mail activities in the first half.
Facebook is willing to pay anyone who successfully hacks into its site and locates bugs.
China's state-run news agency demanded on Tuesday that Internet companies, regulators and police do more to cleanse websites of toxic rumours, adding to signs that the ruling Communist Party wants to tame the explosion of freewheeling microblogs.
The arrest of President Obama's uncle,Onyango Obama, is not the first legal issue for a prominent political family.
Google chairman Eric Schmidt said Google+, the company's new social network that's come under scrutiny for its real names use policy, is for people to stand for something and who are willing to express themselves. Schmidt said if using a real name creates a danger, for instance for people in Iran or Syria, they don't have to use Google+.
President Obama's uncle isn't the first public official's relative to deal with the legal system.
Through its Bug Bounty Program, Facebook has awarded more than $40,000 in the last three weeks to users who report security flaws on the Web site.