Information about you, what you buy, where you go, even where you look is the oil that fuels the digital economy.
The company says it will no longer build its highly anticipated office in Queens, after the deal faced backlash from politicians, taxpayers, and activists.
The Amazon CEO accused the tabloid of “extortion” on Thursday, but legal experts say it’s a close call.
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, the world’s richest man, publishes emails purportedly from the National Enquirer urging him to call off an investigation of the tabloid publisher.
Two days after removing Facebook from its enterprise developer program for breaking the rules, Apple did the same to Google.
The social network announced a policy change to allow for removing entire groups of fraudulent pages at once—even when they all haven’t broken the rules.
When the tech giant helps Wikipedia, it’s also helping itself.
A new Pew survey also finds that more than 50 percent of Facebook users are uncomfortable with how the company collects their information for ads.
Even juicy divorce speculation represents a chance to acknowledge how myriad factors—and people—contribute to the success of a company like Amazon.
For more than 20 years, Amazon has successfully quashed efforts to unionize its American workers, but a new wave of labor organizing is under way.