Lulzsec says it is no more; hands hacking duties to Anonymous.
The Supreme Court rules the State of California can't restrict the sale of violent video games.
The BET Awards took place Saturday night in Los Angeles. Chris Brown took home a number of awards including Best Male R&B Artist and Best Collaboration for Look at me Know, featuring Lil Wayne and Busta Rhymes.
How I Met Your Mother star Neil Patrick Harris announced his engagement via Twitter.
Speculation about the health and whereabouts of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is running wild two weeks after he underwent surgery in Cuba.
Hacking group Anonymous has released a set of files containing documents and links to security and hacking resources on the internet. The released files also include various hacking and counter hacking tools along with the addresses of FBI bureaus in the U.S.
A Chinese-language commercial Times quoted Dan Heyler, a semiconductor analyst with Merrill Lynch in Taipei hinting the upcoming arrival of iPhone 6 in 2012.
The former PM's personal contacts have been compromised
A successful 50-day run of hacking group LulzSec, which saw the sabotaging of websites including those of giant corporations and highly-guarded government agencies, has ended with the hackers issuing a goodbye press release and posting information stolen from various sites in Pastebin. So can we all relax? Is it all over?
George Hotz, well-known iPhone and Sony PS3 hacker, is following in the footsteps of many other celebrated hackers who got hired by technology giants. Hotz, also known as GeoHotz, has joined Facebook and is said to be involved in product development. Hotz's Facebook page says he has been a software engineer at Facebook since May 9. Earlier, Facebook profile hacker Chris Putnam, iOS hacker Peter Hajas, Twitter hacker Michael Mooney, and Ashley Towns, the creator of the first ever iPhone worm,...
LulzSec, a group of hackers that recently drew public attention for carrying out notorious cyber war against government and prominent organizations, has announced a halt to their hacking activities while exposing massive amounts of leaked data to the public.
The driving protest of the Saudi women going on for a month now could hardly get a dozen of hands behind the wheel, the same number that succeeded to do so during the last public driving protest 20 years ago.
LulzSec, the high-profile hacker group that dominated the attention of media and social media alike, has surprised its fans and enemies by announcing its game over, that they will shut down operations. June 25 would mark an end to 50 days of cyber havoc, but the group called on supporters to continue fighting its anti-government movement via Anonymous.
Finally, Neil Patrick Harris announced on Saturday that he has been engaged with his partner David Burtka for years and is planning to marry him. Harris' revelation came after the approval of a bill in New York State legalizing gay marriage.
Google says there was not enough adoption for both of those services.
After nearly three months in jail, Chinese democracy activist Ai Weiwei was freed this week, but that doesn't exactly mean he's 'free.'
3D phones are coming soon thanks to the HTC Evo 3D and the LG Thrill 4G.
NASA has regained some moon dust, that was to be originally sold an auction house in St. Louis.
Google responds to the FTC probe and says it will oblige with the agency's requests.
Michelle Obama arrives in Botswana.
Apple is now suing Samsung in South Korea, the electronics company's home base.
The name “Ai Weiwei” has joined a long list of sensitive words in this country, and associating yourself with the artist has become tantamount to asking for trouble.