New York Times Technology News

NYT > Technology
  1. Apple said it removed WhatsApp and Threads from its China app offerings Friday on Beijing’s orders, amid technological tensions between the U.S. and China.
  2. Manish Lachwani, who founded the software start-up HeadSpin, is the latest tech entrepreneur to face time in prison in recent years.
  3. A federal auto safety agency said the accelerator pedal on the pickup truck, sales of which began in late 2023, could become stuck, increasing the risk of accidents.
  4. “I feel like we’ve been at the club. I need some water and some electrolytes.”
  5. The company’s revenue was 15 percent higher compared with last year, and it solidified its standing as the entertainment company’s dominant streaming service.
  6. The grant to the memory chipmaker is the latest federal award aimed at boosting U.S. chip manufacturing.
  7. Bitcoin aficionados are hoping that a scheduled reduction in the number of new coins going into circulation will cause the price of the cryptocurrency to skyrocket.
  8. Tigran Gambaryan, an American compliance official for the giant cryptocurrency exchange Binance, flew to Nigeria in February for a planned two-day business trip. He hasn’t returned.
  9. Users of Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp and Messenger will be able to turn to the new technology, powered by Meta’s latest artificial intelligence model, to obtain information and complete tasks.
  10. Donald Trump’s social media platform has outdistanced similar conservative sites such as Parler and Gettr, even as it lags far behind X and others.
  11. The dismissals escalated longstanding tensions between company leaders and activist employees opposed to supplying technology to Israel’s government.
  12. A new measure attempts to force the Senate’s hand on passing legislation to ban TikTok or mandate the app’s sale.
  13. It has been replaced by a new model, which will be used in automotive manufacturing. A farewell video featured the old machine running outdoors, performing back flips and awkwardly shimmying.
  14. In a first, a Colorado law extends privacy rights to the neural data increasingly coveted by technology companies.
  15. The company’s directors are asking shareholders to again approve the multibillion-dollar compensation plan and to move the company’s registration to Texas, from Delaware.
  16. Global digital rights advocates are watching to see if Congress acts, worried that other countries could follow suit with app bans of their own.
  17. Rusty Foster could never live in New York. But his hit newsletter, Today in Tabs, is an enduring obsession of the city’s media class.
  18. At a time of heightened confusion and legal battles over access to abortion, women are looking to social media for answers.
  19. It doesn’t take a lot of work to keep copies of your phone’s photos, videos and other files stashed securely in case of an emergency.
  20. “We will be attacked,” the official responsible for fending off cyberthreats said. To prepare, organizers have been hosting war games and paying “bug bounties” to hackers.