Consumer tech
The tech giant has finally revealed its plans to add AI features to its products as it seeks to catch up to rivals. Whether the upgrades actually drive sales remains to be seen.
It only took a single vague post on X by day trader Keith Gill, better known as Roaring Kitty, to light a fire under memestocks such as GameStop that have seen little action since the 2021 rush.
The uproar over the tech giant's ad for its latest iPad may be over the top, but it speaks to uneasiness about the AI revolution.
Life360 says it will list on the Nasdaq, but has yet to provide detail.
With new legislation to overhaul Australia's Privacy Act now due in August, Privacy Commissioner Carly Kind outlines the regulator's plans to become a tougher enforcer and the 'multiple ways to skin the cat of AI governance.'
Notes and observations from the Magnificent Seven earnings releases and investor conference calls.
In 2022 TPG said it wouldn't be interested in working with Optus on an infrastructure sharing agreement just like the one the pair announced today.
Google vice president Paul Gennai has rejected suggestions that the Play Store operator controls the Android ecosystem.
Apple's most senior software engineer has criticised European legislation in the most damning way possible: by saying it will make iPhones more like Androids.
Two of the most high-profile Australian lawsuits in the last 12 months have been defamation cases — and both were won by the media. But lawyers caution there are still problems with our defamation laws.
The extent to which former Uber general manager Mike Abbott was aware the ride-share company flouted laws by using unaccredited drivers has become central to its ongoing court battle with GoCatch.
Data was once considered a goldmine for companies. But a spate of high profile cyberattacks has changed that.
The Sydney-based generative AI company raised $47 million in December and has 7 million users.
Uber is alleged to have deliberately attacked GoCatch's business. The global rideshare company argues its Australian rival was never a viable competitor.
Tim Sweeney has told an Australian court he was aware that updating the games' in-app payment methods was "deceitful" and that it was aimed at avoiding Apple's 30% commission.
Google has brought back the analogy of an app store operator as a shopping centre landlord in its opening submissions against allegations of anticompetitive conduct lodged by Fortnite developer Epic Games.
Epic Games’ announcement last week it would bring its online store to Android and iOS has created new evidence demands in a courtroom nearly 12,000 miles away.