The Australian government says it will tax large digital platforms and search engines unless they agree to share revenue with Australian news media organizations.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -China-based ByteDance and its short-video app TikTok on Monday asked an appeals court to temporarily ...
The TikTok owner fired — and then sued — an intern for ‘deliberately sabotaging’ its LLM. This sounds more like a management ...
The Albanese government today unveiled the strengthened "news bargaining incentive" to encourage deals between major ...
Members of Congress had raised national security concerns about TikTok due to its ownership by ByteDance, which is based in ...
China-based ByteDance and its popular social media app TikTok have requested that an appeals court temporarily halt a law that would require ...
TikTok is seeking a temporary pause on the enforcement of a potential ban on the popular social media app as the Supreme ...
ByteDance declined to comment on the lawsuit on Thursday ... Policy & Regulationcategory Intel's ousted CEO Gelsinger to ...
TikTok and its China-based owner ByteDance have asked a U.S. appeals court to temporarily block a law that would force their ...
Meta will be forced into inking deals with Australian news publishers, or risk paying more significant taxes, as the government attempts to pull the belligerent social media giant into paying news ...
Nevertheless, there are overlaps. Zhu Wenjia, the tech executive behind the recommendation algorithm that powered ByteDance’s first breakout product, the news aggregator Toutiao — has been put ...