Twenty years after Mark Zuckerberg and his mates started Facebook,tech watchers are beginning to ask:have we passed peak social media?
Google is weighing up charging customers to use its AI products. We should be begging it to.
Editing a PR photo is not remarkable,but these days a fear of AI fakes means things are more complicated.
Apple has taken a stand on the decades-old remedy that covering a wet phone with rice will save it from water damage. It has offered a much simpler solution.
A lucky few are amassing considerable wealth selling tailored,adult content on the social media site – but at what cost?
If the intrusion into our secrets,plus the nastiness and the rest,is turning people off the internet,hallelujah.
From Coronation quiche to the Optus outage,Google’s data gives a look at what we’re searching for.
Thousands of Australians will be under scrutiny as liquidators look to claw back money “won” in the Ponzi scheme that burned more than $2 billion in investment.
As Sundar Pichai tells it,the tech giant has always been on the side of consumers as it paid billions of dollars to Apple and Samsung to make Google’s internet search engine the default option on their devices.
As the US takes the tech giant to court in a massive antitrust trial,allegations that Google makes itself worse to earn more in ad money continue.
The unwritten rules of chatting on the phone differ wildly between generations. Here’s some guidance to help you navigate phone calls in 2023.