
Joe Biggs banned from Instagram
This comes after Biggs was banned from Twitter, Shopify, PayPal, and Venmo earlier this month.
This comes after Biggs was banned from Twitter, Shopify, PayPal, and Venmo earlier this month.
Big Tech companies are mostly anti-Trump but it’s been shown that more Microsoft employees support Trump, compared to any other tech company.
Google’s who have insider knowledge must know something we don’t.
Another example of Google manipulating results when they testify in Congress to say they don’t.
It’s not the first time Google have decided to ignore the standard.
An analysis of the twelve 2020 presidential candidates who received the most donations from big tech employees between January and June showed that over 50% of these donations went to Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, and Kamala Harris.
It’s not quite clear how this idea would work to reduce piracy.
Facebook doesn’t need your private info when it can just take your thoughts straight from your brain.
The war against encryption is underway.
It’s starting to look like the site won’t be relaunching after all.
Why would someone who runs a platform that has squashed one side of the public debate be supporting the free speech candidate?
The most trusted name in news is teaming up with the most trusted social network.
The lawsuit sought to hold WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, the Trump campaign, the Russian Federation, and others liable for the 2015/2016 hacks of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) computers which led to thousands of emails being leaked.
Privacy concerns and the rise in adblockers have stalled the market.
The group wants Facebook to share more data with “fact checkers” to improve the results.
The situation reminds people that, on the internet, not everything is always as it seems.
Yet another example of Twitter stepping up its efforts to police speech on the platform.
Amazon is moving into new markets.
Hawley has set his sights on big tech companies in recent months.
This is the latest controversial ban that highlights Twitch’s inconsistent application of its rules.
Apparently, bulk data collection of all citizens is perfectly fine.
Gabbard has consistently spoken out against censorship and promoted free speech online.
Facebook says it’s going to look at the ruling and work out a way to comply.
The debate about end-to-end encryption is rendered useless if Facebook is compromising messages before they even leave the device.
This comes after Biggs was banned from Twitter, Shopify, PayPal, and Venmo earlier this month.
Big Tech companies are mostly anti-Trump but it’s been shown that more Microsoft employees support Trump, compared to any other tech company.
Google’s who have insider knowledge must know something we don’t.
Another example of Google manipulating results when they testify in Congress to say they don’t.
It’s not the first time Google have decided to ignore the standard.
An analysis of the twelve 2020 presidential candidates who received the most donations from big tech employees between January and June showed that over 50% of these donations went to Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, and Kamala Harris.
It’s not quite clear how this idea would work to reduce piracy.
Facebook doesn’t need your private info when it can just take your thoughts straight from your brain.
The war against encryption is underway.
It’s starting to look like the site won’t be relaunching after all.
Why would someone who runs a platform that has squashed one side of the public debate be supporting the free speech candidate?
The most trusted name in news is teaming up with the most trusted social network.
The lawsuit sought to hold WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, the Trump campaign, the Russian Federation, and others liable for the 2015/2016 hacks of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) computers which led to thousands of emails being leaked.
Privacy concerns and the rise in adblockers have stalled the market.
The group wants Facebook to share more data with “fact checkers” to improve the results.
The situation reminds people that, on the internet, not everything is always as it seems.
Yet another example of Twitter stepping up its efforts to police speech on the platform.
Amazon is moving into new markets.
Hawley has set his sights on big tech companies in recent months.
This is the latest controversial ban that highlights Twitch’s inconsistent application of its rules.
Apparently, bulk data collection of all citizens is perfectly fine.
Gabbard has consistently spoken out against censorship and promoted free speech online.
Facebook says it’s going to look at the ruling and work out a way to comply.
The debate about end-to-end encryption is rendered useless if Facebook is compromising messages before they even leave the device.