After more than a decade of leaving Big Tech largely to itself, US antitrust enforcers have cranked up the heat, with several high-profile cases underway that could radically change the way the industry's giants do business.Launched under both the Trump and Biden administrations, five major cases from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) are moving forward against major US technology companies -- including two against Google that could see the company split...
Big tech share prices were dented by a sector-wide sell-off of risky assets last week, ahead of earnings results for some of the 'Magnificent Seven'.
Experts say tech outages do seem to be happening more often.
Comprehensive cross-platform coverage of the U.S. market close on Bloomberg
Comprehensive cross-platform coverage of the U.S. market close on Bloomberg
Comprehensive cross-platform coverage of the U.S. market close on Bloomberg
Comprehensive cross-platform coverage of the U.S. market close on Bloomberg Television, Bloomberg Radio, and YouTube with Sonali Basak, Gina Martin Adams, Carol Massar and Tim Stenovec. (Source: Bloomberg)
Travis Scott has stopped answering the first question of this interview to sign a sneaker that’s been shoved through the rear passenger window of his Range Rover. Dozens of USC students have piled around the car, hoping to catch even a glimpse of one of the biggest stars their generation has seen. The lucky ones get close enough to push phones, sneakers, or hands through the cracked window, angling for a photo, an autograph, or a quick fist-bump. Scott obliges as he’s able, and the car’s driver...
Washington could do more to incentivize tech companies to distance themselves from China, but CEOs should examine how they'd react to a fight in the Pacific, CSET's Sam Bresnick and Emelia Probasco argue.
We discuss these changes and other developments in consumer tech news with Houston Chronicle columnist Dwight Silverman.
Plus: The denim trends she's excited about this season.
Just a year-and-a-half since flipping formats for the shocking unretirement and return of Dallas-Fort Worth radio legend Mike Rhyner, the Dallas Mavericks' flagship radio station - 97.1 FM - is apparently scrapping "The Freak" and again changing direction.