
Facebook Aims to Suppress Dodgy Health Information
Facebook is “down-ranking” posts that moderators believe contain health misinformation. “Misleading health content is particularly bad for our community,” wrote Facebook product manager Travis Yeh

Facebook is “down-ranking” posts that moderators believe contain health misinformation. “Misleading health content is particularly bad for our community,” wrote Facebook product manager Travis Yeh

Mac users with devices made before 2012 might be having trouble with downloading the latest version of Windows. The problem lies in an incompatibility issue

Google recently released a new version of the Google Glass, its bulky smart glasses that flopped upon release in 2012. At its initial launch, Google

San Francisco recently banned the sale of e-cigarettes within city limits, making it the first city to do so. The ban comes amid increasing concerns

Data breaches and fraud are two of the biggest challenges that today’s consumers face in terms of privacy, harm, and inconvenience. Recently there have been

Republican Senator Josh Hawley from Missouri proposed a new bill last week that seeks to correct alleged bias in how giant social media sites censor

In April, a drone successfully transported a donated kidney that was then successfully transplanted to a patient. When it comes to organ transplantation, the faster,

Phone use may be giving kids horns. That’s not poetic language commenting on the bad behavior encouraged through social media. Rather, recent research suggests young

Conducting studies on the effects of digital media has become more difficult for social scientists. A group of researchers, mostly affiliated with Stanford University, argued

Federal regulators are giving more power to phone companies to block robocalls. The Federal Communications Commission voted on Thursday, June 6, for a proposal that

Amazon is working on a wearable, voice-activated device that is able to read human emotions, according to internal documents reviewed by Bloomberg. A patent for

Public USB ports could be infected with harmful malware that threatens smartphone data, according to security experts. Caleb Barlow, vice-president of X-Force Threat Intelligence at