Ahead of HBO’s epic fantasy TV series’ Season 8, Mountain Dew is unveiling limited ‘faceless’ cans that when chilled reveal Arya Stark’s kill list.
Author: Mike Snider, USA TODAY
Verizon to release free features this week to help stop robocalls and catch spam calls
Verizon is just the latest carrier to help consumers stop unwanted robocalls. Its blocking app and spam alert feature is due later this week.
German family, stakeholders in Krispy Kreme, Panera Bread, to donate $11M over Nazi past
The Reimann family, whose JAB Holding Co. controls Krispy Kreme and Panera Bread, will donate $11 million after learning of its ancestors’ Nazi past.
AT&T’s DirecTV, Viacom reach deal, avoid blackout to keep Comedy Central, BET, Nickelodeon
DirecTV and Viacom have reached an agreement to keep Viacom channels such as BET, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon and MTV on the satellite TV service.
These free mobile games on Android and iOS bring fun to spring break, travels
Columnist Marc Saltzman offers up a trio of mobile games you can use to pass the time on spring break or on a long trip.
Facebook temporarily blocked White House official’s page because it acted like a bot
Facebook apologized for blocking White House social media director Dan Scavino’s page because it mistook him for a bot. President Trump was not happy.
Google Stadia takes on Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo with new online game platform
Google’s Stadia, announced at the Game Developers Conference Tuesday, will make games available on Chrome browsers on PCs, computers, phones and TVs.
‘Call of Duty: Mobile’ in the works, players can pre-register now for summer beta test
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.
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?