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Bing has a billion active users, yet Microsoft has fired up another $2 million giveaway to boost traffic - why is that?

Darren Allan | May 12, 2026 11:25 AM CDT

Microsoft is offering those searching with Bing a chance to win some tempting prizes which are part of a $2,000,000 giveaway.

Bing has a billion active users, yet Microsoft has fired up another $2 million giveaway to boost traffic - why is that?

Windows Latest noticed a pop-up promoting this big 'prize drop' which appeared after a Bing search.

Apparently, half of that money, a cool million, is being given away as cash, and the other half in various prizes.

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Continue reading: Bing has a billion active users, yet Microsoft has fired up another $2 million giveaway to boost traffic - why is that? (full post)

YouTube Premium seems to be getting a price increase soon

Hassam Nasir | Apr 11, 2026 5:00 AM CDT

The world of tech just seems to be in a bad place right now. Sony increased the price of its PlayStation 5, Intel and AMD both announced CPU price increases, graphics cards have been in an eternal state of extinction since 2020, DRAM has joined the party with sky-high prices, and even Netflix recently increased prices across all tiers. If you were waiting for some good news on that front, well, today is not that day.

YouTube Premium seems to be getting a price increase soon

Apparently, YouTube is set to raise prices for YouTube Premium, with most tiers increasing by $2 in the US. Under the new rates, a standard YouTube Premium individual subscription will increase from $13.99 to $15.99 per month. If you are paying an annual subscription fee, the plan now costs $159.99, up from $139.99. You save an extra $4 by going with the annual plan under the new rates, but that feels like a drop in the bucket compared to the $20 price bump.

Users who subscribed through the Apple App Store are set to receive a larger price bump, with the rate for an individual Premium subscription now $20.99. The new pricing doesn't even exempt those with YouTube Premium Lite or the Student subscription. These tiers are also set to receive a $1 price increase, bringing their total to $8.99 per month.

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Continue reading: YouTube Premium seems to be getting a price increase soon (full post)

Want to change your Gmail address? Thankfully now you can - here's how

Darren Allan | Mar 31, 2026 12:00 PM CDT

If you've had second thoughts about your Google Account username - which is the first part of your Gmail address, of course - then it's now possible to change it in the US.

Want to change your Gmail address? Thankfully now you can - here's how

TechCrunch spotted the announcement to this effect from Google, which means you can switch that username without having to start a new account from scratch (and that's obviously a less than ideal solution).

This ability actually began to roll out last year in the US, but Google has officially announced that it's now available to everyone (with a Google Account, naturally).

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Continue reading: Want to change your Gmail address? Thankfully now you can - here's how (full post)

Cloudflare issues update over global internet blackout

Jak Connor | Nov 18, 2025 10:02 AM CST

If you think that your internet is playing up because you can't load your favorite website, or even a multiplayer game, don't worry, it likely isn't your home internet that is playing up; it's Cloudflare, the internet hosting service that is responsible for keeping up approximately 20% of all internet traffic.

Cloudflare issues update over global internet blackout

Cloudflare has taken to its status website to issue several updates, with the first being on Nov 18, 2025, 11:48 UTC, where the hosting service stated its "experiencing an internal service degradation" and that "some services may be intermittently impacted."

Additionally, Cloudflare wrote in that update, its focus is on restoring service. Approximately 15 minutes later, it issued another update where it said it's continuing to investigate the issue, and then 20 minutes after that update at 12:03 UTC, it stated it's "still investigating."

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Continue reading: Cloudflare issues update over global internet blackout (full post)

Here's how and why you should stop spam emails and safeguard your personal data

Jak Connor | Oct 3, 2025 1:45 PM CDT

Every day, inboxes around the world are flooded with unsolicited emails that range from pushy marketing to malicious scams, and according to cybersecurity experts, spam costs businesses and individuals billions annually, not to mention the wasted time, productivity, and increased risks of fraud.

Here's how and why you should stop spam emails and safeguard your personal data

In order to prevent this annoyance from occurring, or worse, fraud from happening to you, users should know how to stop these spam emails from hitting their inboxes. Notably, since the COVID-19 pandemic, spam emails have skyrocketed in frequency, and while many email services already filter many types of spam emails into a spam folder, there are still hundreds, and even thousands in some cases, that manage to slip through into the main inbox.

Before we get into how to stop these spam emails from happening, we should outline the different types of spam emails so you can easily identify them.

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Continue reading: Here's how and why you should stop spam emails and safeguard your personal data (full post)

Anyone can download videos off YouTube now, not just paying subscribers - albeit with caveats

Darren Allan | Aug 21, 2025 11:50 AM CDT

One of the key features for YouTube Premium subscribers is now available for free users it seems, in a rather surprising move.

Anyone can download videos off YouTube now, not just paying subscribers - albeit with caveats

This isn't something Google has announced, either, but rather the fact that everyone can now download YouTube videos for viewing offline later emerged via a Reddit post (highlighted by Android Police).

As you can see in the post above from the YouTube subreddit (from the 'Dude_Who_Does_Things') it's possible for everyone to download videos, but the catch is the resolution is restricted so you won't get a very good quality clip.

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Continue reading: Anyone can download videos off YouTube now, not just paying subscribers - albeit with caveats (full post)

AOL is finally discontinuing its dial-up internet service, after 34 years

Kosta Andreadis | Aug 12, 2025 12:31 AM CDT

For those who lived through the dial-up internet days, you'll no doubt have the sound a modem makes when it does its 'dialling' imprinted on your brain forever. You'll also remember that the slow 28.8K and 56K speeds we lived with meant that you had to download images and that it took several minutes to listen to a single song in compressed MP3 format.

AOL is finally discontinuing its dial-up internet service, after 34 years

In the United States, America Online or AOL was synonymous with dial-up internet throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. The company gained notoriety by sending out CD-ROMs to anyone with a mailbox, offering free trials to its service alongside an email address that ends with aol.com. With millions of AOL customers going online, the company also helped usher in the age of instant messaging with AOL Instant Messenger and chat rooms - your 1998 version of Discord.

Even though the term 'AOL' conjures up memories of the age of Netscape Navigator and the Excite search engine, you might be surprised to learn that AOL's dial-up internet service is still a thing that exists. But not for long, as the company has announced that after 34 years of various beep and static sounds, it's set to discontinue its 'Dial-up Internet' service on September 30.

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Continue reading: AOL is finally discontinuing its dial-up internet service, after 34 years (full post)

Scientists prove WiFi signals can be used to track you from location to location

Jak Connor | Jul 23, 2025 7:35 AM CDT

There are many ways to track a human, but researchers in Italy have devised a new method that involves creating a biometric marker for people based on how their body distorts WiFi signals.

Scientists prove WiFi signals can be used to track you from location to location

The researchers are calling this new method of tracking "WhoFi," and detailed how it works in a paper that has yet to be published. The paper titled "WhoFi: Deep Person Re-Identification via WiFi Channel Signal Encoding" explains that re-identification is the primary goal of the new technology, which doesn't necessarily mean a person's identity, such as their name, but just that they are the same individual seen in one location and then in another.

The idea is that WhoFi could be used in video surveillance to maintain constant tracking of a subject without having to use any obvious identifiers such as items of clothing, features, etc.

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Continue reading: Scientists prove WiFi signals can be used to track you from location to location (full post)

Steam's entire library could be yours in 47 seconds with Japan's world record internet speed

Jak Connor | Jul 10, 2025 11:36 AM CDT

What if you wanted to download your entire Steam Library, or perhaps the entire Steam Store? How long would it take you on your home internet connection? Weeks? Possibly years? Maybe even a decade? Japan could do it in a matter of seconds with their new insane internet speed that has broken the world record.

Steam's entire library could be yours in 47 seconds with Japan's world record internet speed

Researchers at Japan's National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) broke the world record for the fastest internet speed by transmitting data a staggering 1.02 petabits per second, which, for those who don't know and understandably so, a petabit is, that's 1,020,000 gigabits per second. You could imagine this speed as seeing your download at 127,500,000 Megabytes per second (MB/s), or 127,500 GB/s. Yes, that is correct. 127,500 gigabytes per second download speed.

How was this speed achieved? NICT used standard-sized fiber optic cables that are typically used in many homes around the world, but the difference was that they were equipped with four cores and over 50 different wavelengths of light to transmit data. To add even more impressive statistics to this achievement, researchers were able to maintain this speed over 51.7 kilometers (32.12 miles), making these kind of speeds feasible for real-world infrastructure.

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Continue reading: Steam's entire library could be yours in 47 seconds with Japan's world record internet speed (full post)

Elon Musk announces XChat: encrypted, vanishing msgs, audio, video calls without phone number

Anthony Garreffa | Jun 1, 2025 11:11 PM CDT

Elon Musk has just announced an all-new XChat is launching within X, which will be rolling out with encryption, vanishing messages, audio and video calls, and more.

Elon Musk announces XChat: encrypted, vanishing msgs, audio, video calls without phone number

XChat is built on Rust with (Bitcoin-style) encryption, with the Tesla and SpaceX boss saying that XChat has a "whole new architecture". Not only do we have encryption and vanishing messages, but XChat will let users send any file of kind, while audio and video calls can be made without a phone number on all platforms.

The new XChat system when compared to competing platforms like Signal and Telegram, differ in both features and security. Telegram has support for large groups and bots, but only its built-in Secret Chats are encrypted, with concerns surrounding metadata collection. Signal has end-to-end encryption by default, with minimal data collection that has people worried about privacy handles, but it's not feature-laden.

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Continue reading: Elon Musk announces XChat: encrypted, vanishing msgs, audio, video calls without phone number (full post)

FBI issues urgent warning for 13 of the most popular routers in the US

Jak Connor | May 14, 2025 12:41 PM CDT

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has issued a warning regarding the safety of some of the most-used routers in the United States, with the agency warning how thirteen of them are now vulnerable to cyberattacks.

FBI issues urgent warning for 13 of the most popular routers in the US

The FBI has taken to its bulletin to publish an update from the cybersecurity team that is warning against the use of routers that have reached their end-of-life period, meaning they are no longer safe to use and now pose a significant vulnerability to both businesses and home users.

For those who don't know, routers are the center point of any network, as they are the device that takes the internet from the outside of the business or home and distributes it to the devices on the network. A compromised router means the entire network is compromised, possibly leading to data theft, device hijacking, identity theft, etc. The FBI warned on May 7 that thirteen routers are vulnerable to a cybercriminal proxy service attack, which is targeting thirteen end-of-life routers with TheMoon malware botnet.

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Continue reading: FBI issues urgent warning for 13 of the most popular routers in the US (full post)

Amazon clarifies rumors around 'hostile and political act' of showing effects of Trump tariffs

Darren Allan | Apr 29, 2025 1:06 PM CDT

Amazon is (or indeed was) considering showing the supposed effect of Trump's tariffs on a limited number of budget products that the retailer sells, and the White House has been quick to condemn this potential move.

Amazon clarifies rumors around 'hostile and political act' of showing effects of Trump tariffs

The controversy was sparked earlier today when a report emerged from the Punchbowl News, which was highlighted on X by its founder, Jake Sherman. It claimed that Amazon is going to display how much of the price of any given item is down to the effect of the tariffs.

However, as CNBC later reported, this is only the case for some of the budget products sold by the retail giant (Amazon Haul merchandise), and it was a move that was only being considered at any rate.

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Continue reading: Amazon clarifies rumors around 'hostile and political act' of showing effects of Trump tariffs (full post)

Remember Napster? The MP3 file-sharing platform is making a metaverse comeback

Kosta Andreadis | Mar 26, 2025 11:27 PM CDT

For those who remember the Wild Wild West days of the internet, Napster was a peer-to-peer file-sharing program that launched in 1999. It quickly took off as a means to share MP3 music files and quickly grew in popularity thanks to the arrival of high-speed broadband internet at the time. Most users had dial-up connections and had to wait several minutes or an hour to get a few songs.

Remember Napster? The MP3 file-sharing platform is making a metaverse comeback

It didn't take long until the Recording Industry Association of America took note, and bands like Metallica made headlines as they moved to sue Napster for facilitating the sharing of copyrighted material. After bankruptcy, Napster became a music streaming service similar to Spotify in 2016 - even though the name 'Napster' has faded into the background.

This week, Napster was acquired by Infinite Reality, the creator of "immersive 3D interfaces," for a cool $207 million. According to CNBC, the company and its name will be used to create virtual 3D spaces for music fans and artists - aka metaverse stuff.

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Continue reading: Remember Napster? The MP3 file-sharing platform is making a metaverse comeback (full post)

Elon Musk says a 'massive cyberattack' is causing service interruptions for X and Grok

Anthony Garreffa | Mar 10, 2025 2:19 PM CDT

X has been up and down for the last few hours and I've been wondering why... but wonder no more: Elon Musk has said that there is a "massive cyberattack" against X and Grok right now.

Elon Musk says a 'massive cyberattack' is causing service interruptions for X and Grok

Elon posted: "There was (still is) a massive cyberattack against X. We get attacked every day, but this was done with a lot of resources. Either a large, coordinated group and/or a country is involved". X user Hassan Sajwani replied to Elon's post saying "they want to silence you and this platform" to which Elon replied with a simple: "Yes".

The news of the massive cyberattack comes after weeks of outrage against Elon and more specifically Tesla, with lunatics (calling a spade a spade) have been targeting Tesla vehicles across the US and the world, attacking them and at times, out outright destroying them. Not just vehicles like the Model 3, Model Y, and Cybertruck, but Tesla dealerships have been damaged in this blind outrage, too.

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Continue reading: Elon Musk says a 'massive cyberattack' is causing service interruptions for X and Grok (full post)

Don't want to pay $14 per month for no ads on YouTube? New Premium Lite plan is now live at $8

Darren Allan | Mar 5, 2025 11:11 AM CST

Those paying for YouTube in the US now have a new option to fork out less money to watch with no adverts (mostly) on the platform, a 'Premium Lite' plan.

Don't want to pay $14 per month for no ads on YouTube? New Premium Lite plan is now live at $8

This ad-free subscription (with a slight catch that we'll come back to) has been a pilot scheme in the US (and elsewhere, including Australia), but is now becoming an official offering from YouTube priced at $7.99 per month.

This is just in the US right now, but Australia will be in line for the same treatment in the "coming weeks" (as well as Germany and Thailand, which are also set to have their pilots converted to a full rollout).

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Continue reading: Don't want to pay $14 per month for no ads on YouTube? New Premium Lite plan is now live at $8 (full post)

Amazon now sells cars - buy a new Hyundai on the site, finance it, or arrange a trade-in

Darren Allan | Dec 10, 2024 11:37 AM CST

Those of you thinking about buying a new car might be a bit shocked to know that you can grab the latest model simply by heading to Amazon - if you're after a Hyundai, that is.

Amazon now sells cars - buy a new Hyundai on the site, finance it, or arrange a trade-in

Amazon Autos is the retail giant's play to get into the car sales game, and it's available right now to customers across 48 cities in the US.

People can head to Amazon and browse through Hyundai's range, then order a new car from a participating local dealer, including arranging finance if necessary, and scheduling a pick-up time at said dealership.

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Continue reading: Amazon now sells cars - buy a new Hyundai on the site, finance it, or arrange a trade-in (full post)

ChatGPT maker OpenAI rumored web browser could kick Google's ass as it struggles with Chrome

Anthony Garreffa | Nov 24, 2024 5:55 PM CST

ChatGPT maker OpenAI is reportedly considering developing a web browser that would compete directly against Google and its popular Chrome browser, combining its AI chatbot and "separately discussed or struck deals to power search features".

ChatGPT maker OpenAI rumored web browser could kick Google's ass as it struggles with Chrome

In a new report from The Information picked up by Reuters, we're learning that OpenAI has spoken about the search product with website and app developers including Conde Nest, Redfin, Eventbrite, and Priceline according to people who have seen the prototypes or designs of the products.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is going in a different direction with the company, establishing itself firmly into the search engine market to defy Google's dominance with the likes of SearchGPT. We all know that Google is the undisputed leader of the search industry, as it's in our everyday speaking terms that we say "I'll Google it" without a second thought, so OpenAI would have an uphill battle (that is worth fighting for).

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Continue reading: ChatGPT maker OpenAI rumored web browser could kick Google's ass as it struggles with Chrome (full post)

Trump making Elon Musk head of 'DOGE' could be the latest move sending Bluesky to the moon

Darren Allan | Nov 13, 2024 7:58 AM CST

The US election has seen winners away from the political landscape, and Bluesky has been one of them, with the social media firm seemingly benefiting from an exodus of users from X.

Trump making Elon Musk head of 'DOGE' could be the latest move sending Bluesky to the moon

Yesterday, Bluesky declared that it had gained a million new recruits (on X, as you can see above).

As TechCrunch reports, the social media outlet reached approximately 14.6 million users as of November 12, having witnessed a surge of folks joining over the weekend. (Bluesky membership was around 9 million just a couple of months back in September 2024).

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Continue reading: Trump making Elon Musk head of 'DOGE' could be the latest move sending Bluesky to the moon (full post)

FTC's click-to-cancel rule makes it easy to cancel subscriptions without jumping through hoops

Darren Allan | Oct 17, 2024 11:32 AM CDT

We've likely all been in the situation where we've subscribed to a service, and then had difficulty canceling that subscription - it's a frustrating place to be, but one which might be a thing of the past thanks to new regulations in the US.

FTC's click-to-cancel rule makes it easy to cancel subscriptions without jumping through hoops

The FTC has just announced a finalized 'click-to-cancel' rule which requires that businesses which get consumers to sign up to a subscription should ensure that it's very easy to subsequently cancel that service.

As mentioned at the outset, we've likely all been there where we come to cancel a service and find ourselves scratching our heads as to how this is achieved. Often, the method of canceling can be hidden deep within the service's dashboard, behind multiple nested menus perhaps.

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Continue reading: FTC's click-to-cancel rule makes it easy to cancel subscriptions without jumping through hoops (full post)

Google announces it's blocking access to extremely popular Chrome ad blocker

Jak Connor | Oct 16, 2024 8:40 AM CDT

Google is planning on removing one of the most popular ad blockers available on Chrome, as the company informs users who now attempt to download it that it "may soon no longer be supported."

Google announces it's blocking access to extremely popular Chrome ad blocker

That ad blocker is uBlock Origin, and according to reports Google has been informing ad blockers such as uBlock that it will be severing support for them after it rolled out the Chrome Manifest V3 extension update. uBlock appears to be included in that as BleepingComputer reports Google's Chrome Web Store is now warning users uBlock may soon be removed "because it doesn't follow best practises for Chrome extensions." Additionally, Google's support bulletin cited user privacy and security as one of the reasons why uBlock is being removed.

BleepingComputer reports that uBlock Origin is not invasive or insecure and that Google's mention of privacy and security has to do with its deprecation of the Manifest V2 extension in favor of Manifest V3. Google's introduction of Manifest V3 ruffled the feathers of extension developers as V3 presented technical challenges, particularly with those such as ad blockers that require greater control over web browsers.

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Continue reading: Google announces it's blocking access to extremely popular Chrome ad blocker (full post)

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