Activision has a new free-to-play mobile version of its popular ‘Call of Duty’ first-person shooting video game is coming for Android and iOS devices.
Author: Mike Snider, USA TODAY
No one reported New Zealand mosque shooting livestream as it happened, Facebook says
Facebook said a livestream video broadcast by the gunman who killed 50 in New Zealand on Friday was also viewed fewer than 200 times.
Cord cutters feel weight of subscription fatigue as video, TV streaming options multiply
If the average consumer subscribes to three streaming services, will those beyond Netflix, Amazon and Hulu lose out as “subscription fatigue” sets in?
Warner Bros. CEO Kevin Tsujihara steps down as sexual misconduct investigation continues
Warner Bros. chairman and CEO Kevin Tsujihara is steppingdown as WarnerMedia continues an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct.
Tom Clancy video game ‘The Division 2’ brings a battered Washington, D.C., to life
Your mission is to bring order and help restore a pandemic-hit nation’s capital in the new video game ‘Tom Clancy’s The Division 2,’ released Friday.
Facebook reportedly faces criminal investigation over data sharing with Amazon, Apple and more
A New York grand jury is looking into the deals Facebook made with other tech companies over sharing of users’ data, according to The New York Times.
DirecTV Now increases subscription prices for new streaming video packages with HBO included
New customers to DirecTV Now will pay more for AT&T’s subscription live TV service, but the two new packages, priced at $50 and $70, come with HBO.
Facebook temporarily removes Elizabeth Warren ads about breaking up big tech
Facebook pulled, then reinstated some of Sen. Warren’s Facebook ads on her plan to break up big tech companies, after a Politico report on the action.
Experts: Boeing stock will weather storm after Ethiopian Airlines crash of 737 MAX 8 plane
Boeing stock fell Monday after the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 killed 157 people, but analysts expect the company to rebound.
CEO of La Croix maker National Beverage blames ‘injustice’ for sales declines; stock falls 15%
Nick Caporella, CEO of National Beverage, the maker of La Croix sparkling water drinks, blamed the company’s poor performance on “injustice.”