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A narrow majority of Americans sides with the Federal Bureau of Investigation in its fight to get Apple Inc. to help unlock the iPhone used by one of the shooters in the San Bernardino, Calif., terrorist attack, according to a new survey.
At Nintendo's flagship New York store reopening Friday, people dressed as the Italian brothers Mario and Luigi roamed the floor. While they looked the part of the plumbers, only one person in the room truly sounded it.
Apple Inc. is fixing "Error 53", the controversial automatic bricking of some iPhones whose screens and fingerprint sensors were installed outside of Apple stores.
Privacy advocates are planning rallies at Apple Inc. stores across the U.S., hoping to convert a social media outcry over a battle for security and individual rights into actual action.
The high-stakes stalemate between Apple and the Justice Department isn't the first time that Washington and Silicon Valley have come to a showdown over security and privacy.
The share of Americans earning income from digital platforms such as Uber and Airbnb is growing rapidly, but those gigs typically supplement incomes rather than replace full-time work.
A little-known Indian company has announced grand plans to sell millions of made-in-India smartphones for less than $4 a piece, despite the fact that it has only been in the smartphone business for five months and has yet to build a factory.
Apple's decision to oppose a judge's order to help the Justice Department unlock a phone linked to the San Bernardino attack stirred up questions and commentary about privacy, security and what's ultimately at stake.
Google said its Express service would begin delivering produce, meat, eggs and other perishable goods in parts of San Francisco and Los Angeles.
Steve Wozniak wants to bring two frenemies together: Hollywood and Silicon Valley.
If you’re considering investing in a standing desk, don’t. Not until you check out a $25 alternative called the Oristand.
Facebook is experimenting with positive messages dubbed "counter speech" to temper extremism on the social network.
Virtual-reality technology is ready for the classroom. Whether teachers are ready for virtual reality is less clear.
Online dating: it's not just what the kids are doing these days. Grandma and Grandpa are getting in on Internet-based romance.
Twitter said it is inserting more tweets at the top of the timeline that a user missed while they were away from the service.
Amazon customers in Japan can take advantage of a free sommelier service when seeking to buy wine online.
A cryptic Apple error message is informing some iPhone owners that their devices, repaired by outsiders, are dead, in what some people view as an Apple effort to exert more control over repairs to its products.
Federal aviation authorities are banning drone flights in much of the Bay Area on Super Bowl Sunday in an effort to prevent potential security scares during the big game.
Line Corp. on Wednesday said its users in Indonesia can now hail motorcycle taxis directly from its chat application, underscoring the company's push to grow its user base outside of Japan, where it dominates mobile messaging.
If Jerry Garcia were alive today, my guess is Hyperspektiv would be one of his favorite iPhone apps. Your photos and video have never been trippier.