A lot of services are struggling right now, including YouTube and Meta's platforms like Facebook. [more]
The DMA Act again comes to the rescue of EU citizens. [more]
The "Federal Trade Commission" has given Apple and the other majors permission to use 6GHz bandwidth for near-field communication. Microsoft, Google, Apple and Meta asked for permission to use the web in this way already in 2019. [more]
Earlier this year, it became clear that Meta was in the process of launching a subscription service for Facebook and Instagram, but at the time it was limited to a few markets. [more]
Facebook Messenger has got games. And yes, we mean when you are in a conversation. [more]
ChatGPT For Google is a genuine Chrome extension, but beware of fakes. [more]
John Carmack has finished his 10-year VR journey. [more]
Microsoft has opened up Teams to consumers who want to organize with groups, and the offering is free. [more]
Facebook's many and large data leaks have repeatedly made it clear that the company has no control. Now it is proven that they are also aware of it. [more]
Meta is investing its entire future in a VR / AR reality, something former Nintendo boss Reggie Fils-Aimé has no faith in. [more]
When Apple launched iOS 14.5 earlier this year, they introduced App Tracking Transparency - a feature to protect your privacy through more transparent data tracking in applications and services. The function meant that one could now finally choose not to be tracked across programs, but... [more]
Meta and Apple are at odds with each other not only for the anti-tracking built into iOS and iPadOS, but the 30 percent Apple charges when someone performs an Apple Pay transaction, also on third-party apps like Facebook. [more]
Meta has chosen to stop face recognition in photos on Facebook after the introduction in July 2010. The changes will take place in the coming weeks. [more]
Facebook was down for many hours last night from before 18:00. GMT +2 [more]
Whatsapp and Facebook Messenger are also experiencing problems, according to Downdetector. [more]
The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) has seen internal Facebook documents showing that high-profile users are not subject to the site's rules in the same way that the rest of us are. Users who have news value, are influential, popular or are associated with "PR risk" for the company, are... [more]
Facebook has apologized for the error and calls it "unacceptable". [more]
It's all about privacy: Mark Zuckerberg's second-biggest fine ever. Netflix also has to pay, Google got away with a warning. [more]