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The success of TikTok and Netflix shows that if you have enough eyeballs, mediocrity is totally OK.
Lees meerSending workers home after a colleague tests positive for the coronavirus will be a fact of life for months to come.
Lees meerWith newer technologies, we risk losing the open highways that have defined our digital lives.
Lees meerAs the rapid pace of change mixes with national security issues, Europe’s role as a global regulator is increasingly tested — and may not be enough.
Lees meerChina is also growing more adept at targeting campaign workers. But contrary to Trump administration warnings, Beijing is mostly targeting Biden campaign officials.
Lees meerDespite what Mark Zuckerberg says, Facebook shapes our world.
Lees meerA day after the S&P 500 had its worst performance in months, stocks mostly reversed their steep early losses on Friday, but still closed the week 4.3 percent off their latest high.
Lees meerThe S&P 500 dropped 3.5 percent on Thursday, the biggest single-day fall since June 11, as big tech companies weighed on it heavily.
Lees meerThe tech giants said states could now send notices directly to smartphones asking people to opt in to the technology, which helps trace the coronavirus.
Lees meerWe need tech optimists to shoot for the moon. But we also need those looking for problems.
Lees meerChanges to Apple’s app store could make developers’ lives — and our smartphones — better.
Lees meerAfter last month’s Facebook boycott, companies are demanding more control over how their ads appear online. And the tech companies seem to be listening.
Lees meerApple is the first U.S. company to reach $2 trillion in value, capping a staggering ascent that began in the pandemic.
Lees meerInvestors have cast the nearly relentless drumbeat of bad news aside to focus on any signs that the worst of the coronavirus pandemic might be over.
Lees meerChina wants to swallow up Hong Kong’s remaining freedoms. But it can’t be allowed to arrest, on American soil, a U.S. citizen.
Lees meerEven though the tech industry’s four biggest companies were stung by a slowdown in spending, they reported a combined $28 billion in profits on Thursday.
Lees meerCongress was once filled with “Atari Democrats.” This week's hearings showed their transformation into trust busters.
Lees meerIt is less clear that tech executives’ strategy of evasive answers will continue to work now that lawmakers have begun doing their homework.
Lees meerThe chiefs of Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook faced withering questions from Democrats about anti-competitive practices and from Republicans about anti-conservative bias.
Lees meerMembers of Congress may say dumb things at the tech hearing, but it’s not necessarily their fault.
Lees meerJeff Bezos of Amazon, Tim Cook of Apple, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook and Sundar Pichai of Google will answer questions from House lawmakers about their business practices.
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