A new study shows cloud applications are vulnerable entryways for hackers to gain access to company data. The good news is you can protect yourself.
Author: Madeline Purdue, USA TODAY
How T-Mobile, AT&T, Verizon and Sprint fight robocalls on their network
Your cell phone provider can help protect you from robocalls. These are the tools T-Mobile, Verizon, AT&T and Sprint offer to their customers.
Do blue light glasses actually work? Everything you need to know before you buy a pair
With the amount of time we spend on our phones and computers increasing, the blue light emitted has side effects, but these glasses can help.
Elon Musk says Teslas to get games ‘Beach Buggy Racing 2,’ ‘Fallout Shelter’
Elon Musk took the stage at E3 to discuss the impact video games had on his success as well as new Tesla updates such as car games and a pickup truck.
Women’s World Cup 2019: A guide to Video Assistant Referee review technology
The 2019 Women’s World Cup is underway, and the referees are getting help from video assistant referee technology to make game-changing decisions.
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki apologizes to LGBTQ community over handling of anti-gay content
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki apologized at to the gay and lesbian community over the handling of anti-gay content on the Google owned video platform.
Pupdate: Dog-centered social media accounts are taking the internet by storm
The latest internet trend has dog-centric social media accounts talking to followers from the dog’s perspective from every social media platform.
Apple lets users track menstrual cycles on Health app, Watch with software update
Apple’s adds Cycle Tracker to the Health app and Watch to record menstruation cycles and patterns, jumping into an industry with over 1,000 apps.
Apple introduces new call blocking software with iOS 13 to combat robocalls
Apple is looking to help users receive fewer robocalls with new call blocking tools included with iOS 13.
Senators say Fair Debt Collection Practices Act proposal puts industry ahead of consumers
Democratic and Independent senators expressed concerns to the CFPB about the financial and security burden the proposed changes might cause consumers.