",{"id":"SIGNIN"}).html('
Instagram's most-followed user, Kim Kardashian, is ready to walk away from the service over the row concerning the photo-sharing app's new Terms of Service.
more headlines
After a month's delay, Nintendo's TVii will finally be available for Wii U owners in the U.S. and Canada.
Google has introduced the scan-and-match technology to Google Play Music in the U.S. Google Play Music is easily one of the many noteworthy additions by Google to its Android operating system, and the company, nearly every day, makes its intentions of providing the best service clearer by continuously adding more for users to reap benefit from.
Job site Glassdoor releases an annual list of the 50 best places to work in, which is computed based on inputs from employees and the Employees' Choice Awards for 2013 winner per Glassdoor is social networking site Facebook.
Instagram's new terms of service allow it to sell your photos to advertisers without compensation to you.
Google has never been shy about entering businesses dominated by Apple. Steve Jobs made it very public that he felt that Android was ripping off the iPhone. Eric Schmidt had to resign from Apple's board over "conflict of interest" in 2009 due to Android and Chrome OS. In 2011 Google made it clear that it would take on one of Apple's most successful businesses, music.
Recently, Google dropped support for Microsoft ActiveSync, affecting Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8-based device users in the process. This move took Microsoft by surprise, and now the company is trying to find a way out of this mess.
A small number of Twitter users can now download their entire posting history on the microblogging site.
Twitter was close to buying Instagram before its social network rival Facebook, according to the New York Times.
IBM has released its X-Force 2012 Mid-Year Trend and Risk Report, and results show that India has been sending out roughly 16 percent of all spam.
The long-awaited Redbox Instant video streaming service from Verizon and Coinstar is finally due to launch later this month, posing a direct challenge to Netflix.
Google's new SafeSearch algorithm prevents inadvertent NSFW images showing up in search results.
Facebook has introduced new controls, which the social networking site hopes will make people feel more secure about their privacy.