Facebook has quietly shuttered its three-year-old email service that gave users "@facebook.com" addresses.
The system will analyze, in real time, whether a posting online is true.
For the first time, Facebook is letting users identify themselves as a gender other than male and female.
Iceland-based social media platform aims to capture users seeking to avoid prying eyes of governments.
YouTube has unveiled a new feature that lets users see, respond to and moderate comments all in one place.
Although the new iPhone app is meant to be funny, its creators are hoping it will take off.
Users can now send an e-mail to anybody on Google+, even without knowing their e-mail address.
Tumblr is flaunting its hipster credentials with a first-ever breakdown of the year's hottest trends and topics.
Colo. firm partnered up with Denver Broncos to projected tweets and photos from fans onto scoreboard.
Survey of young Internet users notes that the most common online taunts echo the schoolyard.