Last week, app growth guru Nikita Bier debuted his newest app, Explode, on X. One video showed the ghost from Snapchat’s logo blowing up, followed by the text: “Snapchat 2011-2025.” Another showed the ghost flatlining in a hospital bed. The videos aren’t entirely tongue-in-cheek: Bier really does want to bring Snapchat down.
Milwaukee Public Schools is pursuing a lawsuit against the companies behind Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube.
The lawsuit accuses the social media giants of worsening the mental health crisis and contributing to suicide risks.
The woman at the centre of the criminal case against embattled Ottawa lawyer James Bowie testified Thursday about the “deal” Bowie allegedly offered her in a legal services for sex proposition.
Latest from the scene of DC plane disaster as grim recovery mission continues A major search and rescue operation is underway after an American Airlines jet collided with a military helicopter in midair and fell into the Potomac River in Washington DC.
There is "almost nothing left" of Gaza and rebuilding the war-ravaged enclave could take 10 to 15 years, U.S. President Donald Trump's Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff told Axios in an interview at the end of his trip to the region on Thursday.
Source Code, the first autobiography in a trilogy, takes us from the tech mogul’s teenage geekery to the early days of Microsoft
Open Instagram and go to Settings. Select Device Permissions. Look for Location and choose Never or While Using the App. To disable location tracking entirely, turn off Location Services in your phone's settings. These steps prevent Instagram from accessing or sharing your location.
For nonprofit organizations, where marketing and advertising can be cost-prohibitive, social media is a critical (and free) asset that should be leveraged.
Additional police presence will be at Pryor Public Schools on Monday after the police department received reports of threats made on social media.Officials bel
Ritika Shroff had the typical Gen Z experience with social media. At 13, she signed up for Instagram, then Snapchat. Later, she downloaded TikTok and worked her way through other popular platforms. But in high school,
Police officers reported Thursday that a 15-year-old boy was facing a criminal charge after he used a Snapchat group to write a threat to “shoot up” a school.