The latest Net neutrality provisions in a mammoth Senate communications bill stopped short of giving Internet companies and consumer advocacy groups all the assurances they've requested.
Yahoo has begun testing Glue Pages, a new way to present search results that take advantage of its background as an Internet portal.
Yahoo announced a non-exclusive partnership under which rival Google will supply it with some search ads, a move that could increase Yahoo search revenue but that also gives Google even more power in the market.
In the wake of Microsoft's decision to pull its Yahoo offer, executives are trying to make the case that Redmond's online business can go it alone.
Google is set to introduce capabilities for US and international advertisers to reach Web surfers by their city of origin--a move that represents the search site's latest push for ad sales.
More information is dribbling out about the exercise of extraordinary powers granted to federal police since Sept 11. We unmask the Patriot Act.
Nobody, least of all Yahoo and Google, doubted that the two companies' search-advertising deal would escape any antitrust scrutiny.
While Wall Street clamours for a piece of the search king, start-ups are trying to fill in the technology niches.
The software giant updates its corporate Web search technology with in-house software, its latest effort to catch up with innovations in the navigation tools market.
The vast corpus of human knowledge could soon be published on the Internet. The problem now is how to wade through it.
Web portal MSN is testing a new search service that touts faster, tidier results, in what is the latest development in a fast-moving contest to help people find what they're looking for online.
You can't beat the price. For a good, basic internet security suite, we recommend Trend Micro Internet Security 2009.
The software maker launches its first major update to the browser in years, offering tabbed browsing and security additions.
In one of the most anticipated announcements in recent years, Apple introduced the "iPhone," a mobile device that CEO Steve Jobs promised will reinvent the phone.
During his keynote address at Macworld 2007, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the long-rumoured iPhone.
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Love me, tender
Can not-so-smart meters help the NBN?
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