Japanese gaming giant Nintendo has admitted that hackers have breached 300,000 accounts since early April, gaining access to personal information such as birthdays and email addresses but not credit-card details.
Chinese video app TikTok's new Chief Executive Kevin Mayer has told EU digital chief Thierry Breton he intends to play an active role fighting disinformation, an EU official said on Tuesday, as Breton pushes tech giants to step up their efforts against fake news.
Vodafone Group Plc , the world's second-biggest mobile operator, has warned that Britain's desire to lead the world in 5G technology will face a big blow if it decides to remove China's Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from the country's telecoms infrastructure.
Four Republican U.S. senators on Tuesday urged the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to review whether to revise liability protections for internet companies after President Donald Trump urged action.
Oil prices fell on Wednesday as an industry report showed a rise in crude and fuel inventories in the United States, renewing concerns about oversupply and slumping fuel demand in the world's largest crude consumer.
Chinese companies are putting off plans for U.S. listings as tensions between the world's top two economies rise, lawyers, bankers, accountants and regulators involved in what has been a major capital-raising route told Reuters.
Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd said it expects to repay the Hong Kong government for HKUS$19.5 billion (US$2.52 billion) of preference shares over a three to five year period.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Tuesday chided British bank HSBC for backing moves by China to end Hong Kong's autonomy, saying such "corporate kowtows" got little in return from Beijing.
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia has been hit with a series of stiff challenges this year - the COVID-19 pandemic, crash in global oil prices and political instability which saw an unexpected change of government. With most business activities halted for about two months in a lockdown since Mar 18, the ......
Facebook’s founder offers a principled defence of his decision to leave up a Donald Trump tweet about looting in the aftermath of protests against George Floyd’s killing, but the circumstances raise doubts, says Mark Cenite.