
Google faces its most consequential antritrust trial in 20 years
A Washington federal court will determine whether the technology company illegally stifled competition in the world of online search

A Washington federal court will determine whether the technology company illegally stifled competition in the world of online search

Leading tech developers including Microsoft, OpenAI and Google have acknowledged that growing demand for their AI tools carries hefty costs

The new rule starts in mid-November, just under a year before the U.S. presidential election. It will also affect campaign ads ahead of next year’s elections in India, South Africa, the European Union and other regions

The agreement, cited in a court filing reached Tuesday, is subject to approval by the attorneys general and board of directors of Google’s parent company, execution of an agreement and court approval

The city has become the battlefront for technology companies vying to control the future of urban mobility amid concerns about the safety of driverless vehicles
The latest advances in artificial intelligence and augmented reality are transforming language teaching on the internet. It is now possible to improve your speaking skills without the need for a video call with a real person

Meta just launched a new model for programmers to use instead of the paid versions offered by OpenAI and Microsoft

The Digital Services Act aims to protect European users when it comes to privacy, transparency and removal of harmful or illegal content

When our mind is full of distractions, we are more likely to make mistakes. Furthermore, it also affects our personal relationships and our own quality of life

The company’s revenue for its fiscal second quarter doubled from the same time last year to $13.51 billion, culminating in a profit of $6.2 billion

The Digital Services Act is part of a suite of tech-focused regulations crafted by the 27-nation bloc — long a global leader in cracking down on tech giants

Prabhakar is helping to guide the U.S. approach to safeguarding AI technology, relying in part on cooperation from big American tech firms like Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Meta

Artificial intelligence comes in addition to classic solutions, like tagging images, searching for duplicates and sorting them into albums

Paying more attention to your phone than to your partner while sharing a moment of leisure is one of the factors that creates the most problems in a relationship, therapists say

Google Maps, Apple Maps and Waze report accidents and traffic density on a route in real time with the help of users

The features of the tech giant’s navigation service extend beyond what is commonly known

Zoom, based in San Jose, California, saw explosive growth during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic as companies scrambled to shift to remote work

Legislators are seeking ways to protect constituents while not hindering cutting-edge advancements in medicine, science, business, education and more

Our mobile devices listen to and collect a significant amount of data on us, even without using our microphones

With “tweets,” Twitter accomplished in just a few years something few companies have done in a lifetime: It became a verb and implanted itself into the lexicon of America and the world

Some of the guidelines call for third-party oversight of the workings of commercial AI systems, though they don’t detail who will audit the technology or hold the companies accountable

The rapidly-evolving technology raises concerns about whether it can be trusted to provide accurate reports, and whether it would lead to human journalists losing their jobs

Users can block apps or set challenges to reach their ‘digital detox’ goals

Websites use artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT to publish thousands of articles every day solely to generate advertising revenue

The Google Research team behind Med-PaLM doesn’t envision autonomous use or replacing doctors

Treasury yields tumbled further in the bond market after a report showed inflation at the wholesale level cooled by more in June than expected

The lawmakers tell the IRS, the Justice Department, the Federal Trade Commission and the IRS watchdog the findings “reveal a shocking breach of taxpayer privacy”