As Iranian authorities restore some online services after crushing antigovernment demonstrations, they are using a technological dragnet to target attendees of the protests.
Anduril founder Palmer Luckey admits he likes to hire people with experience off the beaten path—and he’s now scouting new talent via a drone-flying contest.
As a marketing guy with zero technical skills, I "vibe coded" a production app for my company over the weekend—and it worked.
Federal immigration officers fanning out across Minnesota and other parts of the country are newly equipped with an array of state-of-the-art surveillance technologies, thanks to a bill passed last ...
Protecting your privacy is crucial if you suspect your iPhone is being tracked. Tracking can occur through various methods, including shared Apple IDs, spyware, or third-party apps. Each method poses ...
Retailers want to know if you’ll pay more than the next person for the same goods and services. And they’ll use data on everything from your eye movements to your walk to find out. The grocery store ...
Our culture has never been comfortable with death. When someone close to us has a parent, sibling, or child die, we often don’t know what to say, let alone how to provide comfort and support. It’s ...
Name Recognition in iOS 26 lets your iPhone listen for your name even when you are wearing earphones. When someone calls you, your iPhone shows a notification so you stay aware while listening to ...
NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command) had the first ever Santa tracker in 1955. While it used to be just a boring animation of Santa’s sleigh and reindeer flying across a map, NORAD has ...
"As Santa flies through the skies, satellites track his position by detecting Rudolph's nose, which gives off an infrared signature similar to that of a missile." When you purchase through links on ...