The Latest Twitter Update Tries to Address Doxxing
The micro-blogging mecca announces "new enforcement actions" to battle malicious online activity.
The micro-blogging mecca announces "new enforcement actions" to battle malicious online activity.
Mayor switches London's cycle-hire banking allegiance for a cool £7 million a year and a smartphone app.
Facebook has stopped trying to restrict the gender we can choose at last! The previous drop-down list of 56 options is replaced by an open box to type in whatever you like.
Quality over quantity, or are we just getting our gogglebox fix from those slabs in our pockets?
Somehow the Ramnit social-network worm of 2012 only just had its servers shut down.
Overnight a simple garment broke the internet. Black and blue? White and gold? Let us settle it for you, with a little help from our old friend science.
A mattress that rolls up into an extra chair during the day, so that you don't have to worry about finding somewhere to store it? What a thoroughly friendly piece of furniture. Read More >>
The seemingly unprofitable and pointless habit of gnats to hover in a cloud is, in fact, the single most productive thing they'll ever do with their short lives.
The day is only 40 minutes longer on Mars, but those minutes do add up as time goes on.
Now, if you see a worrisome post from a friend and report it, Facebook will prompt them to get help on their next login—after a third party reviews it.
It costs a lot to produce titanium traditionally, but a new technique could drastically reduce the expense, meaning the material will be as useful for cars as it is for fighter jets.
People want to make their smartwatches fashion statements, and are willing to go to extreme lengths to make that happen. Now Motorola is going to make that process easier.
It's called the Wankband, and it lets you charge your gadgets using the power of self love. It was only a matter of time.
They reveal everything from temperature and energy use, to how much radiation we beam into space. Here's how to understand the maps that help us to understand our planet's vital signs.
In a galaxy far, far away — 12.8 billion light-years away to be more exact — is a newly discovered supermassive black hole that weighs as much as 12 billion of our suns. Read more >
One year? It's a lovely sounding idea, but let's file this plan under "insanely hypothetical".