News

Tom Snyder explores a judge's ruling that Google unlawfully cemented its search dominance through exclusionary deals.
Google remains cosy in its position as dominant player, but changes are ripening on the horizon, reckons Ori Gold.
Why scientists are studying bird poop, the world’s fastest backflip and all about the microbes living in your sink. Plus, ...
Hyderabad: Remember the 1965 Bollywood song ‘Gumnaam Hai Koi‘ which was shot inside the St Augustine Complex of Old Goa? The ...
Google released its Material 3 Expressive visual redesign for Android 16 earlier this month, and here's what you think of it.
With the new update, Google says Circle to Search translations won't stop at a single screen; it will keep translating on-screen content as you scroll. In fact, the functionality will even work if you ...
A US court has ruled that Google won’t be forced to sell Chrome or Android as part of its antitrust case with the Department ...
MINNEAPOLIS — Doctors discovered a bullet fragment in the neck of a 10-year-old boy who went viral for recounting how his friend jumped on top of him to shield him during a mass shooting at ...
Google avoids breakup in landmark monopoly case, with the court instead imposing limits on exclusive search contracts, data, ...
Since its initial release in January last year, Google's Circle to Search feature has seen several improvements. The latest ...
Google has agreed to pay $35.8 million (A$55 million) fine in Australia after admitting it made illegal deals that blocked rival search engines from Android phones. The company admitted wrongdoing and ...
Explore how Judge Mehta's antitrust order impacts Google and its AI search rivals, plus analyst insights on GOOGL stock.