GBA4iOS met its end on Tuesday, after Nintendo of America filed a DMCA takedown request with its creator and the Github code repository.
Nicole Kidman's Princess Grace film opens Cannes Film Festival but does anyone approve of it?
A Christian lobbyist wants a boycott against the openly gay football player.
Everplan's Abby Schneiderman and Adam Seifer discussed how their new product could revolutionize death planning in the tech space.
The virus, which displays flu-like symptoms, can lead to pneumonia, breathing problems and in severe cases, kidney failure and death.
Ukraine is set to host roundtable talks with Moscow on Wednesday set to resolve the ongoing crisis in eastern parts of the country.
James Napier was sentenced to 240 years in prison and retribution of almost $100,000 for each of his child pornography victims.
Russia says U.S. participation is not necessary for the continued operation of the space station.
The three drones found earlier were single-engine propeller planes carrying Japan-made cameras and were set to fly over military facilities.
Baraka replaces Cory Booker, now a U.S. senator.
Student debt increased to an unprecedented $1.1 trillion.
The Chinese are shipping soil to the reef to enlarge it for an airstrip, Philippine and U.S. sources say.
A retail slowdown in April--and cuts to food stamps--may affect Wal-Mart's first quarter earnings.
Hunter Biden, son of Vice President Joe Biden, will join the top private gas producer in Ukraine.
China's investment in a Kenyan railroad shows a superpower eager to capture African hearts and minds, but not quite succeeding yet.
The sustained public concern over the negative effects of neonicotinoids has reached statehouses across the US.
Hunter Biden's business partner Devon Archer, who has ties to John Kerry, has reportedly been appointed to the company's board.
China expanded its ban on foreign television content online to include Japanese and Korean shows.
Tuesday’s “right to be forgotten” ruling underscores significant differences in data privacy laws in the U.S. and Europe.
The EU's ruling that Google must respond to requests to remove "irrelevant" information could close doors that the Internet opened for everyone.
"This is really the make or break moment.”
In similar accidents in the U.S. companies have avoided prosecution.