Cybersecurity Stocks To Watch Amid Shift To AI, Cloud
Cybersecurity stocks have underperformed in 2023. But cloud security companies may be better positioned as corporate budgets tighten.
Cybersecurity stocks have underperformed in 2023. But cloud security companies may be better positioned as corporate budgets tighten.
Forbes' study looked at gas prices, commute times, average speeds, and weather to calculate the worst U.S. cities for driving.
Social media giant Meta will report its Q1 earnings after the bell Wednesday.
Last week when a security researcher said he could easily obtain the precise location from any one of the millions of users of a widely used phone-tracking app, we had to see it for ourselves. Eric Daigle, a computer science and economics student at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, found the vulnerabilities in the tracking app iSharing as part of an investigation into the security of location-tracking apps. Daigle said the bugs allowed anyone using the app to access anyone else's coordinates, even if the user wasn't actively sharing their location data with anybody else.
Tesla's surge is putting Big Tech earnings center stage as investors look to megacaps to lift stocks.
If you love to jam while driving, you know the stock speakers in your car don’t always cut it. Here are 5 great speakers to satisfy your ears in your ride.
As Tesla's profits sink, Musk reaches for an autonomous future.
Rivian is targeting owners of a truck or SUV comparable to its R1T and R1S models by offering a trade-in bonus of up to $5,000 and free charging.
Boeing (BA) on Wednesday reported results that beat Wall Street expectations after a tumultuous first quarter.
Fantasy baseball analyst Fred Zinkie offers up some big-picture trading tips before April wraps up, along with some key players to make moves on.
Valve has closed a loophole in its refund policy that let users play many hours of a game before its official release and still get their money back.
Fans rave about how good these feel — and sound — in their ears: 'My favorite songs come to life in a way I've never experienced.'
The biggest news stories this morning: X, for some reason, has a TV app now, The best travel gear for graduates, Adobe Photoshop’s latest beta makes AI-generated images from simple text prompts.
Qualcomm is debuted its Snapdragon Elite Plus chip Wednesday, as the company aims to take on Intel and AMD in the laptop market.
We're finally into the "show me" portion of the AI narrative, and Coca-Cola and Microsoft's new deal might be a glimpse of what the near-term future will be like for AI.
To capitalize on that trend, one of the bigger startups in the space, the Dublin-founded Tines, is announcing $50 million in funding. Tines started with its roots in security workflow automation but has seen adoption across other parts of the IT landscape. "We weren’t proactively trying to raise and were focused on building the business," Tines' CEO and co-founder Eoin Hinchy said in an interview.
It's finally happening. Reggie Bush is getting his trophy back.
The U.K.'s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is launching preliminary enquiries into whether the close-knit tie-ups and hiring practices involving Microsoft, Amazon and a trio of AI startups falls within the scope of its merger rules — and whether the arrangements could impact competition in the U.K. market. The announcement comes amid growing scrutiny of Big Tech's approach to M&A in the world of AI, where critics argue that the so-called "quasi-merger" has emerged as the flavor of the day as a means of bypassing regulatory scrutiny. Earlier this year, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) launched its own enquiries into Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft's various investments in emerging AI companies to establish whether the "partnerships pursued by dominant companies risk distorting innovation and undermining fair competition."
It used to be that you could pay for a retail version of Windows 11 and expect it to be ad-free, but those days are apparently finito.
The bark of the 'Mexican skin tree' is known for its regenerative properties.
The Mercedes-Benz G-Class has been in regular production since 1979. It's changed a lot since then, but it's never seen a change quite like this. Meet the Mercedes-Benz G 580 with EQ Technology.