Meta's threat to leave Europe hints at waning big tech influence
Zuckerberg is between a rock and a hard place with his company suffering one setback after another.
Zuckerberg is between a rock and a hard place with his company suffering one setback after another.
World leaders are not entirely exempt from Twitter policies, the social media company stressed, but "foreign policy saber-rattling on economic or military issues are generally not in violation of the Twitter Rules."
Everything on LinkedIn's Q4 earnings report was in tip-top shape -- except the outlook.
The Alibaba-backed Danger Maps, which allows "crowdmapping" of pollution sources, is now expanding to cover missing people and child abuse.
SAP's hijacking of the Oracle open World #OOW #OOW12 hashtags was roundly criticised as tasteless and classless by some of SAP's closest friends. Discuss.
Your business may not have to deal with issues of life and death in social media, but there are lessons for everyone in how Australia's police forces interact with the public.
Venture capitalists have their finger on the pulse of technology's future. What's around the next corner? We talk to Khosla Ventures' Shirish Sathaye.
Reddit, with over 2 billion pageviews and 35 million active users a month, is to shutter its doors on January 18th for 12 hours in protest of the SOPA and PROTECT IP draft laws.
But, to really make an impact on Congress, other major Web sites must follow Reddit's lead to stop the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP laws from being passed.
Facebook has tested its new Disaster Message Board service in Japan, showing how social networks are becoming key to staying in contact during disasters.