News

This week’s tech highlights include competitors seeking to buy Google’s Chrome amid legal battles, OnePlus launching a ...
In fact, I'm just young enough that my first non-IE browser wasn't Chrome, but Firefox. My family purchased our first "modern" desktop PC in 2006 after I got an iPod nano for my birthday (no, Windows ...
Competition for any advantage in the booming artificial intelligence industry is so fierce that the fighting is spilling over ...
Alphabet’s latest filings offer a few clues about how it can be successful without depending on AI everything.
OpenAI, Perplexity AI and Yahoo have expressed interest in buying Chrome, as Google's legal battle escalates. Here's what it ...
Google believes it’s the only company that can operate Chrome, the world’s most popular web browser, and that it would suffer ...
If a federal court were to order Google, owned by $1.99 trillion company Alphabet Inc., to divest Chrome, then Yahoo would be ...
To make this thing even more of a spectacle, Yahoo! (never forget the !) has thrown its hat into the ring and stated that it ...
A Yahoo executive said it is currently developing its own web browser as part of plans to 'revitalize' its search offering, ...
The General Manager of Google Chrome testified in court and insisted on the company's unmatched ability to run the Chrome ...
Parsa Tabriz, Google's vice president of engineering and general manager for Chrome, warned that ordering the divestment of ...
Chrome could eventually be up for sale, if the US Department of Justice gets its way in the remedies trial for US v. Google.