Kansas City Chiefs quarterback and NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes says he is just as aggressive while playing ‘Call of Duty’ as he is on the football field.
Author: Mike Snider, USA TODAY
AT&T, Disney, Epic Games drop YouTube ads over concerns of pedophile comments on videos
AT&T, Disney and Epic Games are among companies pulling ads from YouTube over concerns that exploitative activity by pedophiles on the video site.
Papa John’s serves up college tuition benefit to employees of pizza chain
Troubled pizza chain Papa John’s will pay college tuition for its employees and assistance for franchisees.
New high-res music streaming service Qobuz launches in US, takes aim at Spotify, Pandora
A new streaming service, Qobuz, lets you listen to music at a higher quality than leading services such as Spotify, Apple Music and Amazon Music.
Amid criticism, Apple, Google assessing app that lets Saudi men track women
The tech giants face criticism for offering a Saudi government app that lets men track the movements of women.
Facebook inadvertently pulls, reinstates Trump Organization ads labeled as political
Facebook reportedly removed, and reinstated more than 100 ads from The Trump Organization because the network mistakenly identified them as political.
Brother of Lauren Sanchez reportedly is source of Bezos’ leaked texts, photos
The brother of former Los Angeles news anchor Lauren Sanchez reportedly leaked texts and photos shared between her and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.
‘Fortnite’ hit with earthquake tremors as game nears Season 7 end
Tremors have begun occurring in popular video game ‘Fortnite,’ which some say suggest an earth-shaking event will soon hit the online phenomenon.
More VR, 4K video could be coming to your favorite NBA games thanks to AT&T deal
The multi-year deal, tipping off with AT&T’s sponsorship of the NBA All-Star Game’s Slam Dunk Contest, focuses on marketing, but could involve tech.
T-Mobile promises not to raise prices for 3 years if Sprint merger is approved
T-Mobile CEO John Legere told the FCC the wireless provider will not raise prices for three years if its $59 billion merger with Sprint is approved.