Facebook Moments Makes Photo Sharing Easy, But Ugh, Another Facebook App
It’s a great idea, so why can’t it just be part of Facebook?
It’s a great idea, so why can’t it just be part of Facebook?
The social media giant believes it can change the way we shop.
In recent years VR has had something of a renaissance, and we can attribute this more or less to one person: Palmer Luckey, who invented the Oculus Rift.
Parker may have not always worked within the law, but his maverick approach appears to have ultimately paid off.
It’s one of those rare shows that actually seems to understand what’s corrupt and rotten at the heart of the tech industry — and wants to burn it all down.
Looks like Facebook is as wary of Big Brother as the rest of us.
You can post a link to a GIF, and Facebook will produce the animation, just like pretty much every other social network’s been doing for years.
Oculus Rift has acquired a tech startup called Surreal Vision, which will potentially bring better 3D chops to the fabled headset, as the company specialises in "real-time 3D scene reconstruction".
Facebook has a mythology that’s used to indoctrinate workers. To help spread this ancestral origin story, Facebook enlisted its in-house print shop to publish a book of cultish aphorisms to guide inductees towards the light.
Extra information about new contacts gets displayed when you first get in touch.
The idea sounds flat-out utopian: Free internet! For everyone! Starting in the least-connected countries! Of course, there’s a catch: It's controlled by Facebook.
The VR company's founder says he is keen to keep the headset open to all kinds of material.
"Like" tools can track people without accounts, so lock everything down if you value privacy.
This is what an internet icon looks like when it’s been turned into potentially lethal street drug.
Compulsory country-by-country earnings declarations and tougher tax laws could be in place by 2020.
The Times, The Guardian, BBC News, BuzzFeed, The Atlantic, National Geographic, NBC News – among others.