Google Patents Tech for Self-Driving Cars to Detect, Avoid Emergency Vehicles
Google’s self-driving cars may be able to detect and avoid law enforcement and emergency vehicles, according to a patent from the company.

Google’s self-driving cars may be able to detect and avoid law enforcement and emergency vehicles, according to a patent from the company.

Nearly 800,000 users’ information has been exposed in a data breach of the porn site Brazzers.

Free Speech Defense and Jihad Watch have accused Google of skewing their search results to promote a post from the Islamic Supreme Council defending Jihad as a “misunderstood concept” when searching for “jihad.”

A Floridian man has been arrested after he allegedly used the dating app Plenty of Fish to lure teenagers to his motel room so he could then sell them for sex.

Those who consider themselves as “very right wing” are more likely to have a satisfactory sex life, according to a new European survey by YouGov that interviewed over 19,000 people.

Gay conservative and creator of the Twinks4Trump photo series Lucian Wintrich spoke to NBC News to discuss the backlash he has received since coming out as a conservative Trump supporter.

Pokémon Go developer Niantic has responded to Sen. Al Franken after he sent a letter about concerns regarding the use of personal data by the company.

Breitbart’s Milo Yiannopoulos managed to troll Ghostbusters actress Leslie Jones and comedian Amy Schumer on national television during an ABC Nightline feature on … trolling!

In just two weeks since its beta launch, free speech Twitter alternative Gab has already accumulated a waiting list of over thirty-thousand people looking to get onto the platform.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has programmed his AI butler to ignore commands from his wife, answering only to him, the billionaire revealed in a recent interview.

Milo sat down to speak with Breitbart Editor-In-Chief Alex Marlow during the latest episode of the Milo Yiannopoulos Show, where the two recalled Milo’s beatdown of TIME reporter Joel Stein on the previous episode. “And who were you saying this

Twitter has released a new monetization tool for videos on the platform, adding the ability to include advertisements before videos.

Two consumer privacy watchdog groups have filed a formal complaint to the FTC in response to WhatsApp’s announcement last week that they would start sharing user data with their parent company Facebook.

Former Megaupload founder, Mega CEO, and cloud storage entrepreneur Kim Dotcom has been granted permission to livestream his extradition appeal on YouTube.

A 65-year-old woman from Virginia shot down a drone with a 20-gauge shotgun after it was spotted hovering over her property.

Microsoft’s Saudi Arabian Vice President has issued an apology after the translation tool for its search engine, Bing, translated “Daesh” into “Saudi Arabia”.

The Democrats say our headlines are offensive and extreme. Have they checked out some of their own side’s?

Former wrestling champion Hulk Hogan has won another match against Gawker founder Nick Denton, after a judge sided with Hogan to deny Denton’s bid to lease his $4.25 million Manhattan apartment.

A heroic 4chan poster yelled an internet meme at the Democratic presidential candidate.

Facebook is now using your WhatsApp data for advertisements on the platform, despite previously promising to never “sell users out.”

One of NASA’s Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatories, the STEREO-B probe, has re-established contact with scientists despite nearly two years of silence after it disconnected in October 2014.

Last week we reported on Twitter’s “quality filter” being introduced to the social network in order to combat “harassment” by hiding certain accounts. This week, users on the social network might have noticed that the setting has been turned on for everyone.

I recently got the chance to sit down and talk to Andrew Torba, CEO of Gab.ai, a new freedom of speech-focused social network. Though the Twitter-style network was only launched last Monday and is still very much in early beta, thousands of people are currently waiting in line for an invitation to the service, which aims to act as a shelter for freedom of speech and expression.

Twitter has once again refused to take action after rapper Talib Kweli Greene again lambasted black conservatives as “coons.”

The founder of the now-defunct gossip blog Gawker is upset.

A five-story “Blue Screen of Death” was allegedly spotted in Thailand on Thursday in what appears to be a software error for an electronic sign outside a store.

All operations at Gawker.com have ceased from today, after Univision purchased the controversial news outlet last week and announced the main site’s closure.

Memphis Police officers are investigating a potential sexual assault after a group of boys broadcast themselves allegedly having sex with a fifteen-year-old girl on Facebook Live.

How a politically inexperienced band of hobbyists brought a media empire to its knees.

An employee in Whitehall, the center for British government, tried to negatively edit Breitbart Tech editor Milo Yiannopoulos’ Wikipedia page today.

Thunder Dungeon, a popular Facebook comedy page with over 400,000 likes, has become the latest victim of Facebook’s bizarre and unexplained suspension wave.
Twitter has reportedly suspended around 235,000 terrorist sympathizing accounts over the last six months.

Twitter will introduce a new “quality filter” tool to the platform this week, allowing users to filter out tweets based on the “origins and behavior” of accounts.

The site, which developed a toxic reputation for gratuitous violations of privacy and wacky left-wing politics will be no more.

Popular internet browser Opera has 63 built in news outlets on their featured news section, but it doesn’t appear to have a single conservative source.

A group of popular Facebook meme pages have launched a revolt against Facebook’s increasingly strict and bizarre censorship.

Breitbart’s Managing Editor and Social Media Director, Wynton Hall, joined Stephen K. Bannon on Breitbart News Daily on SiriusXM Patriot Channel 125 to discuss the recent launch of Breitbart’s Instagram account.

Twitter attempted to dodge Milo Yiannopoulos’ data request by falsely claiming that he lives in the United States of America and is therefore ineligible to receive the information.

Three black students from California have sparked massive controversy after they advertised house share accommodation for “POC only,” or “People of Color,” refusing applications from white students.

Grassroots anti-Gawker group “Jail Denton” have started a boycott on all Ziff Davis advertisers, after it was reported that the umbrella media company was set to purchase the bankrupt and controversial Gawker Media.
